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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1880-10-22, Page 3Icesm Into the white of an egg, beie tee till very light, stir 6 table -spoonfuls of powdered sugar, and "peel ever the sake while warm. Pieseas. -Pickles should be touched only with a dry spoon or ladle. A few drops of water, or the inteoduction of a wet spoon, will sometimes spoil the en- tire °entente of • pickle ler. LIGlir Tim CAKE. Beat the whites end yolks of two elms eeperataly; take two-teirds isf a cup of thick, sweet salt; put in the yolks end whip these in- gredient& briskly, then sif: in a rounded - up cup of flour in which haa been stirred a teaspoon of baking powder; add the whites of the eggs, and flavor to suit the Coax Pores. — Two cups of wheat flout; one oup et corn meal; two heap- ing tempoonfuls of bakmg powder, one evagf teaspoonful of salt; a cup, one-third fa of sugar; three eggs well beaten. Sweet milk added to tho mixture But& Went to make it run nicely from the spoon. Thim makes two ogles in fiat tin. CARMEN JILLY. —Take half a raw chicken, mit and pepper to taste; pound the chicken with a mallet (meat and bones together) till pulpy. Put in the mucepen and cover with cold weeer; boil till the meat is in rags, and the water re- duced to one-half; strain and press through a colander, then through a cuarse cloth; add salt and pepper and simaier five minutes; skim when cool and press into • deep bowl. 00114 Brest% Ptirmtwo.—Four table- spoonfuls of corn -starch UT one quart of milk; dissolve the cernatarch; heat the remainder of the milk to near boiling, after having put in a little salt; then add the oorn-starch; boil three minutes, stir- ring it briskly; allow it to cool, and then thoroughly mix it with two or three eggs, well beaten, with four tablespoon- fuls of sugar; flavor to taste and bake half an hour. Cider Bmeer.—Take one down Large pine cones, varnish, and 'lay away to dry; t ike the tame number of small ones and treat in the lame manner. %re,. they are dry take the bottom of a snuff- box and glue on the large cones, glueing them together, at the same time letting the basket get wider at the top. Take the small cones, place them at the bot- tom on the outside between the large ones, and the basket is complete. Rhubarb is very easily cultivated, provided you give it a very rich and dime soil. It may be set out in autumn, as it ceases growing, or early in the spring. It may be increased largely by cutting the roots so as to have one or more good buds on a piece. It should be planted about three feet apart each way, and will give • good crop the se - omit season of growing. It sheuld be ! well top.dressed escif year 131101rNID CAULIY1.01. KR. —Divide the heads iuto sprigs, throw them into a saucepan containing just enough boiling water to cover thew, with a teespoonfnl of salt in it; boil them rapidly till tender, which can be ascertained by taking out a sprig with a fork and testing it. Tura them out in a colander to drain a few minutes, then reverse them from the oplander on to the dish on which they are to be served; pour over them a amall quantity either of brown sauce or of good thickteed butter melted and made quite hot; sprinkle over them bis- cuit raspings and grated dieese; set the dish in a hot oven or under a smart red- hot salamander; when the surface is nicely and evenly browned, send to table. Yesterday's cold cauliflower can be warmed in a little butter or muce, and reappear to -day, renovated and more de- licious than ever. Persons ant) Cling*, Said Mr whittler, ieoeutly to • cot. respondent of the Ohioago Viler (icon : " I 01At 01 doom a great deal, aunt in summer take long wit:er. I still write when I feel like it, but have eo gu'ar habits of work. I lead a great deal, but am beginning to wive Lc mible w th taste in writiog watt/rude es a petal ex ample of a feather-witight pic, and the London Sindeeard Joined/lien style of gruppling with one '' Mr. }Willey is in error imagining that Diokens, in his later years, wrote with a steel pen He e. ii - strange house or hotel, where a luill i‘ould not be procured." Colonel Gordon is credited. by The North (Aiwa Herald wit& loving offered this plain languige to the Chieese try : " It is idiotic for Chine to think ohe can take the field against Aran& But if you will tight, then carry your Court and Emper e, your archives, end all the rusty and creaking inac'enery of your central government, ler away iat the interior of th.: dountiy; for once hostilities are begun on the eastern sea- board, Russia will, in a few week& ter mistreas of Peking. Only be seserse that this meant the downfall yuur A San Francisco millionsire, Mr. IL H. Macdonald, has offered 1100, riX) to - varsity on condition that an equel sum shall be raised by the Baptist. Presey_ terian, Episcopalian, Congregational and Methodist denominations. He further stipulates that all person,' otherwice meeting the prescribed requirements nu entrance shall be admitted to the Uni- versity upon equal terms, without rove,' their religious opinions, nationality, imx or color; that no professor, . tudent or employee shall be connected with Cie University, in any of ite depertreents, who is addicted t the use of edam) or opium in any form, or who veer spiritu- ous, fermented cr nuut liquors ef Any kind or character as • beverage, u.d that none of these articks shall be allowed to be sold or used as such en or shout the premises. We suspect that Mr. MAC- donaM will not be required to part with that $100,000 for some time- if those conditions are to be rigidly enforced. Ma. Beacom's 0 emits. --Referring to the terrible ordeal througe which he ed to come up conversation ii. the most "accidental" ma ener. Mr. Beer' - er broke out in a sert of "by the •way" form, and said he: " Speaking aoeut my experience as a lectnrer, reminds me of some, I might say, rtenarkable offers I received a few years ego. At a certain period in my life, which ;roe no doubt, will remember, I was .ffered by a sort of syndicate who waa in the business 1300,- 000 if I would give them iny Cane, in- cluding Sundays, for the space of twelve months. They cffered to pity me $160,- 000 in advance, and the remaleing went& " We naturally exclaimed, "What a temptation!" "Not a bit or it," he re- plied. "Do you suppose that I would go about the country like a monkey one year for $300.000 or for any ether anm of money? This was only one of a wore ef offers I received. P. T. BarnuM offered Me $10,000 if I would lectere in his ooli- seum ten nighta, choosing my own Lieu:, and themes. A man in Baltimore offer ed 11100 an evening, for a long term, if I would simply appear in the principal hell there with him, and se for thirty minutes each night on the atesre in view dif the audience, and not say a single word." APPLE Brrrea: —Making this is well understood by most old farmers' wives, but people who live in cities, and tiepend on the market and the family grooer to furnish them all such articles ready pre- pared, do not know how vastly more econoinical it is to make their own. Take good apples, all of one kind, so they will cook evenly, pare and quarter there, then put into boiling cider, about two gallons ef apples to one of cider boil it first and then simmer slowly (stir ring constantly), about 12 hours, till it is reduced to a thick smooth pulp, when it can he put away in open jars fie win ter use. Now is the tirne for making apple butter, while apple. and cider are plenty and good. min do onmething for social life at the table. II one cannot talk, he oast listen or ask questions and draw out others who cm talk. Good listeners ars neeemary as good talkers. Never argue at the table; but plewant sto- ries, relate or read anecdotes, and look test for the good a all. Sometime, a single anecdote from A par.er starts a onnvereation that lasts during the whole meal time 4 tenni% table shiiiild be twerht and cheerful, • sort 4 domestic irheng every's-me rum his or her offering, greet or small, 4 pleseariewas a el e ahem for et lewd a hHef apace In • day, all annoyances are aside,. all stermy tempers hnshowl, ell enamels beanie, every owe being glad and onntent to sit down at the mine !merit and egit the same bread and mak. melting it whether it were a rich or • dinner herb, eouallo • joyful 'scrammed When old Mrs Bunsby dad got through reading in the morning paper an &eyelet of the last fire, she turned her spectecles from her eyes to the top of her head and remarked: "If the city firemen would wear the genuine hum knit stockints, such as we make and wear in the °wintry they wouldn't be a bustin' of their hem at every fire." The base -ball season has ended, and the mellifluoua mouthinp of the umpire, ae he manfully argues with the moond et is dull, and the new wing foe the hoe- pital will not need to be built for another meson. The base runner has "got under for the last time (we wish some of them had), the home plate tea got a "slide," "fly" time has passed, and the only bat- ter in the land is in the griddle-oake pen. The boys have earned this run BURN* AND TR) POEM ETNITN111.1111. Sone time after he wee attached to the melee, a smuggler neat Burns one n.rht. while wandering try the Nith, and not aware tries it was, offered to sell him setae whisky hit had in conoealment. '' Toe ire twisted on a had merchant. saki the Rani " Vie Robert Perna, the imager The fellow stared: het with E bet you're tikes/Ma Robert Rens, the talinitittPf Vida v wand ANL) nkUTEDINO. a talk to the student* of a Dualisms °irreg. in Poughkeepsie, Rev Robert Col yer add the subject of hug owu for . GYM to be well boru, for as the pro- verb runs, you cannot make • whiatle out of • pie's tail. Only wheu Mr. Lincoln this once in a speech at the west, an eigeirious Yankee sent him such a whistle by the next emit Still this is the truth .o wh oh the proverb points, that what se call good blood is one condition of sw- ami in life; and thee, 1 think the Collyer Wan can But we usenet claim it as the Ademses wee and the Quinceys, and the fine old fainilies on this river, for we go back to the grandfathers and grand- mothers, and there we stop; and both the men were sailors end both were lost at sea. So whet I moan by being well bon. is this, that my own father was one of the most healthful Meg I ever lei .w, and my mother one of the moat healthful stoinen, and he Mid brown and she was a blonde. My tether's eyes were dark wid *oft, and my mother's eyes were blue blended weh grey, and oould snap fire end make thiums boom. And the funny nose juts out strong and uratches the family cl.in: and, as heard Mr. Emerson say once, tie • Least deal in noses. My father. e good a smith as ever good at an anvil, and that was all. He gad no other faculty, except that of strik- ing a tune in the little meeting -house; and you were not sure what tune it was going to be until he had got to the end or the first line. Bnt my inother was a women of such faculty, though she could hardly read or write. that I believe if she had been ordered to take charge of a 70 - gun ship and to carry it through • battle, give her time to 'tarn the ropes, she would do it. She had in her alio 'wells of poesy and humor, and Leughter so down her faoe, and a deep aeiding ten- derness, like that of the e tittle, And this they tied in common, Ihey were as free from infectiotur aa the stare. The nioet woeful fevers woUld break out in the cottages all about us and deciinate the neighbors, and they were ,,always on hand to help, going end coming as. the sunshine goes and comes, never thinking of changing their garment& Yet they never caught a fever, nor did any of their ehildren, or felt the *lightest touch of fear. Awl this is how I mine at the guess that we were well born. They were so heal- thy, and not like in like, aa the poet says, but in difference, and the mother wee beyond all question the better -half in those fine powers on which the children have tio draw for their success in life. Moral—don't marry a doll. TABLE ETIQUETTE. There is nothing which is a more cer- tain test to good breciling than manners tit toe teble. Still, while there are faulta• of which no person of natural delicacy or refinement would et -or be guilty, there are many little pointa of nicety which might net of themselves occur to one unfamiliar with the usages, of the polite world, and it is both ill-bred and unkind to sneer at uaietakes of this claw. Among the very gross faults to be avoided are sitting down at the teble in a whirl, want of punctuality in ooming to the table, and haste. to leavaikbefore the elope of_ the mein. This last is most disrespect- ful to tie. one at the head of the table. Baste, eagerness, or aleeorption in swal- lowing food; finding fault with the food; want of neatness and care in using table implements, such ea cutting your fork instead of your meat; greed in appro- priating any particular dish; eating one thing greedily instead of using it. as • proper accomeaniment to another; ac- cepting more food than is required; leaving food on yoer plate; making a noise in eating; scraping your plate con- spicuously: fingering the dress, hair or table -cloth; reaching over the table for things instead of quietly askingfor them; reaching across mother's plate in order to peas something to a third person;want imeatient at neoersary intervals between eourses. These faults are so obvious 'Mt one would think that there wail no need to point them out, but we see them committed every day. Some other little permits which are queetions of usage are:- Eat pie with • fork end pudding with a spoon, unless in some cases, when, !whams, both may be re- quired. Est fish with a ferk and a small stip of Uresel. Always break breed ...stead of cutting it with • knife, but take care not to erunible .t in the finger,' Rest your knife and fork on your bread in ?seeing your plate when yogi have finished eating. Do not Imre, your spoon in your cup when you have finished eating. Seat ladies in the left of gentlemen at the table. and in phasing anything do e noiselessly and at the left- hand In waiting on the table de net smear food over th • itlats. er place dif forma kinds in unpleasant juxtepootion to tack "thin. 4.nd Weer .ipon people things for "iamb thee do not wale In Leipimg second time to • liah do not my* more thee st Ara Do not at table, In returning ..,41 .... Jur peat favors. would Just say. those a benefit will please Erase. tit Veneer. Life Sim Photos. ;COO $7.00 Site Muss. 1.80 1.00 Cabineta Photo per doe.. 3,,e0 Card Photo, per doe., 1.60 I-55 And Frames to mut Ute above at Come one. mote ell ! and have your hearts gladdened by getting good and cheap Photos at 1755 E. L. Jemmied's. HOP BITTERS. (A Medicine, set a Drink.) HOPS, stymy, 3LANDRAILE. Alum Premix Az* Barr llunicAL Qv•Li ems or ALL drama BITTAMIS Liver, It Idney.tand criueryd mans. e. • rowdier v8.1.seleteonmeaapir.m.especlalIy 1111000 IN COLD. Will be mid for a came they will sot care 0 balp, or tor anything Impure or laJarlowi found In theta. kat your druggist for s',p Blatereand try theta before you sleep. 'fake aei Other. D. C te aa absolute and irresistible CUM for Barre ma cumeas Ail sold ay lashes Mfg. Cm4":11=Ww, Y..*Tasolo,obt. Pond's Extract Subdues fejtammaticni. Acute and Chronic— Coiefrots ail Hemorrhages, Venous and Mama a h c Wonder of Healing. r., duce ay., of the HollPita for women in Soho iteuare, London, writing to "The lancet," under date of August 23. 1871). wig; have used it for some time (ten to fifteen minima) with marked benefit in cases of passive uterine tieniorrbege," POND'S EXTRACT. THE VEOETADLI PAIN DEsTROTEr. it, of England, says : "I have prescribed POND'S EXTRACT for Hemorrhages of dllbeent kinds, for Hemorrhoids, and for afflictions of the eyes, and also Rheumatic inteuninatery swelling of the Joints. with great success." Also supported by the following able phy- POND'S EXTRACT. DR. HERING, a physician of national the virtues of Aconite and Arnica. and con- signee tonic property which renders it im- mensely superior to both." POND'S EXTRACT. Y., writes in the Medical Union: "Out of 130 mules of Egypcian Ophthalmia shims.. of the eye), 130 casks were cured by POND'S PONEYS EXTRACT. USED ONCE—USED ALWAY4. Y.: "I know of no remedy so generally use- ful ia a tastily." CAUTION. POND'S EXTRACT is wild only In Irttlea with the same Mown In the glass, and our Landscape trade -mark on buff wrapper. /121" It is unsafe to me other articles Yew:. our directions. Insist on baring POE1YS EX- TRACT. Refuse all imitations and substitutes. Prices et POND'S EXTRACT, :We , $1.00 $175 POND'S EXTRACT 00., 14 Wiest 14th Street, New York. Said by all Ilrwegiada. plea, mei mak tangs tae; sae r•ii savor or sasywbore. remit nieeiv rein • "wither f" " Why friend, ' „e „ „eel, mei Therm, •• the poet ie tree lute ' elm table you ran peas like re Innen what owneivise weir preweY Orno Uhl. Paw Ware • third por- from hand ti. hand, it heck of them is - Manufactured by the Mihaly* UM, Mail a-, o•sssas, Meek Absolutely ear's esteem, Bronchitis, estarrk, Bay rimsr, aU Throat and Lung diseases. relieves aad *area emsnapties. A uial of this excellent remedy costs you no more than oaf slaty WItOm '001111 Parreare me. to say nothing of Prescriptions The fact that disease ems be cured by Alemerrtom Is wel: establo!,d. The ..theVe. LOIN: PAD COO' ns the ernbudirts 1 of the research of some et tee best medical sled' x wad writers in the world.and Doss ctlIa. y all 148 and 160 McGill Street. Montreal. I'. Q.. Oeneral .% gents for the Dominion NOTRE C. P. R. R. BE 1 The folkiering letter has riot beets reorived front' fir aka A. fdasith meld Olbee of the Canadian High Callitillgalunal I the Manager of The Estate of R. 13. EDICTS, Dist Eke, - Having learned foeu my personal friend, the Hen. Alexander Macken- zie, who has lately lammed through your town, that you keep ries etweter AND •IT +STOCK OP DRY 00008 IN GODZILICH, and that you sell very cheap, I weigh to matte enningementa with you to supply the men working on the 17. P. R. R. They will require piles of Shirts and Drawers, also Over -coats, Tweeds, Cloths, Flame and Cotton -Shirting*, Socks, Mitts, Hats, Caps, and a regular supply of itice fresh I learn with deep regret that you still have a large number of Refermers in that section of Canada, and as 1 know they axe wonderful people for cheap goods, I fear that even the N. P. won't prevent them from buying yon out before my re- turn—but be sure to keep plenty of the above goods for me, and when I get back from Ottawa I will make it all 0. -K. I remain, your friend, JOHN A. 1761 Miss J Stewart, MillinerDress-Maker, 111.1111S y fir HOSIERY, 'OF MITCHELL MANCFATURE, for Ladies' and Children. Apprentices. Wante.d. THE SQUARE, GabERICH. (leer 02_75, VIII AT g11.3a. MISS STEWART. Chas. A. Nairn, DEALER IN Fine Groceries and Provisions, Crockery, Glassware and China, Having purchased the bulginess of Mr. HENRY HowroN, is now prepared to supply au old customers and as many new ones as may favor him with their patronage. . AN INSPECTION SOLICITED. NO TROUBLE TO SHOW GOODS. 1752 Con of Hamilton Street and Mark. t Square. Daniel Gordon, coiet-macf IlliflaCr. %lest House its the Uourity, and Las ye.st Stock this see: Lieideig.. PARLOR Stems, EASY CHAIRS, Cash Buyers will find it to their advantage to see my stock if they need good article at a clogs prim. D. VORDON, West Street, near Post Oftee, Goskriesfs. W4,1(11. GLOBE, TIE 101111C11 OF TIE WEEKLIES. The Largest ! pitilskil 3 MOON " Weekly 0161e " 1881, thl 11100111V SYSX1112 On fls wed matte sin NO NOB, 1111 will is esMo ONE DOLLAR. The Cheapest ! The Best ! Containing 90 columns ot reading matter. and admittedly the beet authority in agricultural and commercial circles throughout the Do - Its enormous circulation distributed. as it is, in all parte of the country. renders it the best mamas ever7where- INCREASED SPEED IN PUBLICATION ! Remember thet all inbecriptions sent In no tweets this date and 1st Jimmie', 18111, will au - from date a subscription to 31et of December, Orden asd remittances to celdreesed Wink away to INV yearly Sub - taller of Ile -westIn Glebe " for 1881, 1 Handsome Steel Di- vined Portrait 01 116 late II 1 TO ode and Int el in It Ttri best style ot modern THE GLOBE PRINTING CO TORONTO sainted Is tang earinceseelei dist riet throe/heat tar Demisters isliteadid ateemesets ellbred Se geed mew. MUM WW1 TIfitiell ercantile Printina GOLD I'LL= se ihe hem p% • imitates table de goal 4t• Garda. It mark hos he hew selected old bright Ifscirela Led me Imeftwas 1.4.4-41 Ole 64,4 wry sesser• MOO, al aka Dos. 'nig GUN: M.6. f=la Wisseeses. dos • 1.111171M ILEADIPlas RILI RSA OR.