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Take podophyllin and sanguinaria, of each ten grains; leptandrin,
twenty grains; white sugar, forty grains. Triturate or rub the whole
well together in a mortar and divide into twenty powders, and take one
night and morning. If they operate much on the bowels take but one a
day._Uses:_ Valuable in liver complaint, torp... |
HYSTERIC PILLS.Take asafoetida and carbonate of ammonia, of each one dram;
pulverized opium and macrotin, of each thirty grains. Melt the first
two articles over the fire, and then stir in the others. Mix well and
make into sixty pills. Dose: One or two pills, in cases of hysteric
fits, every two or three hours; also g... |
Take gum guaiac, prickly ash berries (or double as much bark of the
root), cloves, and cinnamon bark, of each two ounces; gum camphor and
gum myrrh, of each one ounce; gum kino, half an ounce. Reduce all to a
coarse powder and add to one quart of best French brandy. Let it stand
ten days or two weeks to digest, shaking... |
To make a most excellent toast for a reduced or convalescent patient,
take bread twenty-four or thirty-six hours old, which has been made of
a mixture of fine wheat flour and Indian meal and a pure yeast batter
mixed with eggs. Toast it until of a delicate brown, and then (if the
patient be not inclined to fever) immer... |
Following will be found directions for preparing three nutritious
fluids, which are of great value in all diseases, either acute or
chronic, that are attended or followed by prostration; debility,
whether general or of certain organs only; derangement of the
digestive organs, weak stomach, indigestion, heartburn or sou... |
Choose some of the most perfect buds of the flowers you would
preserve, such as are latest in blowing and ready to open. Cut them
off with a pair off scissors, leaving to each, if possible, apiece of
stem about three inches long. Cover the end of the stem immediately
with sealing wax, and when the buds are a little shr... |
The chief features to be observed in house furnishing are color, form,
and proportion. All stiffness of design in furniture should be
avoided. Do not attempt to match articles, but rather carry out the
same idea as to color and form in the whole. It is not _en regle_ to
have decorations in sets or pairs; the arrangemen... |
The carpet, if in tapestry, looks more effective if in grounds of pale
canary or light gray, with designs in bright-colored woodland flowers
and borders to match. The new ingrain carpets, with their pretty
designs and bright colors, are very fashionable for rooms that are
much used.Whatever may be the prevailing tint o... |
It is a remark too often made that this or that "is good enough for a
servant." If all knew that unpleasant surroundings made unpleasant
servants and ill-prepared meals, we think more pains would be taken to
have pleasant and comfortable kitchens. There should be a pleasant
window or two through which fresh air and flo... |
For washing woolens, silks, or fine prints liable to fade. One pint
beefs gall, two pounds common bar soap cut fine, one quart boiling
soft water; boil slowly, stirring occasionally until well mixed. Pour
into a flat vessel, and when cold cut into pieces to dry.TO TAKE OUT SCORCH.If a shirt bosom or any other article h... |
This is done by a process known as pouncing. The process is as
follows: Place the pattern (rough side up) on the material to be
stamped, placing heavy weights on the corner to keep it from slipping;
then rub the powder over the perforations with the pouncet or
distributor described below till the pattern is clearly mar... |
Begin with the letter W. Lay it on the sheet of wax and cut out the
waxen letter after the pattern with a penknife previously dipped in
water. Next cut the E, and so on till the seven letters are cut out,
care being taken to powder the blotter every time a new sheet of wax
is laid on. Lay the back of the box on the tab... |
Procure the bristles of a very young pig, five or six weeks old. After
washing, put them in a very strong solution of chloride of lime and
let them remain in it till whitened; then rinse well in warm water
till free from chlorine. Color them while damp, some in different
shades of green and some in different shades of ... |
For patterns you can use any natural leaf, forming the creases in wax
with the thumb nail or a needle. To put the flowers together, or the
leaves on to the stem, hold in the hand until warm enough to stick. If
the sheeted wax is to be used in summer, put in a little balsam of fir
to make it hard. If for winter, none wi... |
--the laundress' assistant; warranted not to injure the finest fabric.
No acid; no potash. In the wash room it saves time, labor, expense,
muscle, temper, and hands. The clothes will come out cleaned and
white, without wear or tear or rubbing on washboards, therefore will
last twice as long. For housecleaning it is une... |
POISONS. ANTIDOTES.
Acids, Alkalies: Soap and milk, chalk or soda.
Alkalies, Vegetable acids, vinegar, oil in
abundance.
Alcohol, Common salt, moderately.
Arsenic, ... |
Cleopatra's freckle balm, 29
Cure profuse perspiration, to, 31
Cleopatra's enamel, 31
Cure freckles, to, 31
Cosmetic bath, a, 32
Certain cure fo... |
Skin, the, 22
Scurf, scurvy, 27
Soften and whiten the skin, 30
Soft, white hands, 46
Sexual intercourse--its laws and conditions, 105
Seduction, ... |
Produced by D Alexander and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)THE
YOUNG ALASKANS
ON THE MISSOURIByEMERSON HOUGH_Author of_
"YOUNG ALASKANS IN THE ROCKIES"
"YOUNG ALASKANS IN THE FAR NORTH"
ETC.HARPE... |
"And all for what?" he mused, later. "All for what, if it wasn't for
America, and for what America was meant to be, and for what America was
and is? So, about my boys--what d'ye think, my dear, if they wandered
with me, hobbling back from the soil of old France, over the soil of the
New France that once lay up the Big ... |
"And some days, on long reaches and the wind O.K., we'd do forty-five or
fifty," said Rob. "Of course, we can't figure on top notch all the way.
We've got to include bad days, break-downs, accidents, delays we can't
figure on at home, but that always get in their work somehow. Look at
all our own other trips.""Depends ... |
"So there they were, with the Flag up over a country that nobody knew
anything at all about. Then they started out, on May 14 of that year,
1804. And since that time that unknown America has grown to be one of
the richest, if not the very richest, land in the world. And since that
time, so much has the world changed, I... |
"They were soldiers, both of them, fighting men. Lewis had some
education, and his mind was very keen. He was the private secretary of
President Thomas Jefferson, but Jefferson says he was not 'regularly
educated.' He studied some months in astronomy and other scientific
lines, under Mr. Andrew Ellicott, of Lancaster, ... |
Uncle Dick smiled and nodded. "It's going to be all right! She rides
like a duck. Spread that foresail, Frank, you and Jesse. We'll do our
six miles an hour, sure as shooting! Haul that foresail squarer, Jesse,
so she won't spill the wind. Now, Rob, keep her dead ahead.""How far did they go each day?" demanded Jesse, "... |
"They got a deer that day," said Rob, poring over the _Journal_, "I
expect about their first deer."Rob was turning over the pages on ahead. "Hah!" said he. "The men didn't
always take care of the grub; here it says, 'Lyed corn and Grece will
be issued, the next day Poark and flour, and the following, Indian meal
and Po... |
"Poor Clark!" smiled Rob. "What with rubbing 'musquitr' bites and
spelling in his daily report, he must have had a hard time. He had
another regular entry, too, as you said, Jesse, that about the 'jentle
brease.' I don't know how many ways he spelled it, but he seems to have
had no confidence at all in his own spelling... |
"To-day. But we'll not start until to-morrow morning. I've got a few
friends to see here, and my Company of Volunteers for Northwestern
Discovery will like to look around a little. We'll stop at a hotel
to-night. I'm trusting you to have everything ready for us by nine
to-morrow morning.""That's all right," replied Joh... |
"Well, maybe the soldiers didn't, for they had 'Tumers & Felons & the
Musquiters were verry bad,'" he went on. "I don't think their grub list
was right--too much meat and salt stuff. But from now on they certainly
did get plenty of game--all kinds of it, bears, deer, elk, beaver,
venison, buffalo, turkeys, geese, grous... |
"Take it easy, fellows," counseled the leader. "We've got to 'sun our
powder,' as our _Journal_ would say. John, when you set down the day's
doings in your own journal, make it simple as William Clark would. It's
more manly. Well, here we are."Rob looked ruefully at the wet willow thicket in which their camp was
pitche... |
"Two voyagers of the Lewis and Clark expedition had wintered here before
that time, trapping--the beaver were so thick. Imagine yourself not far
up the river and shooting at an elk four times, as Will Clark did--then
not getting him. Imagine yourself along with that summer fishing party
along this little old river, and... |
"But now we've just begun to catch up with our story, for we were
talking some time back where they first got a buffalo. That was about
thirty or forty miles above here. By to-morrow night we'll camp in our
fifth state since we left home--Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, South
Dakota.""On our way!" sung out Rob. "We h... |
"But even this is not all I am trying to get into your minds about this
country where our lost hunter Shannon was wandering alone. They were
getting all sorts of elk, catfish, and beaver, from the last of August
on, but better here--on September 5th they saw both 'goats' and wild
turkeys on the same day. Did you know t... |
"Buffalo and elk, every way you can look!" exclaimed John. "Elk swimming
across the river. Herds of game feeding on the bluff sides! Grouse,
foxes, prairie dogs, jack rabbits, pelicans, squirrels, deer,
wolves--the boats full of meat all the time, and two or three beaver
every night! Now there's cottonwoods. By and by ... |
Uncle Dick nodded, and Rob went on, referring to his _Journal_. "And
then the big chief said what they had done was O.K., and asked the
white men to 'take pity on them'--which I think is an old Indian term
of asking for some more gifts. Anyhow, the upshot was they smoked the
peace pipe and ate 'some of the most Delicat... |
"I suppose you did that to get more of a mattress?" he said. "But
suppose you wanted to keep warm in really cold weather, in a snowstorm,
say. Which side of the robe would you wear outside?""Why, the smooth side, of course!" replied Jesse, who was rolling the
robe. "That'd have the warm fur next to you, so you'd be war... |
"That was a big grizzly," Uncle Dick nodded, "a very big one, for this
latitude. The biggest silvertip grizzly I ever knew in Montana weighed
nine hundred pounds. But they were bigger in California and all up the
Pacific coast--trees and bears grew bigger there, for some reason. You
boys have killed Kadiaks as big as t... |
"The outer wall was about eighteen feet high. They had several
fireplaces. They made a couple of storerooms in the angle of the two
wings, and then put up their stockade in front, to complete their
square. This stockade was made of upright logs, and had a gate, like
most of the frontier posts, so that, what with their ... |
"No one knows where Sacagawea was buried, though her history was traced
a little way after the return to this country. She was buried perhaps in
the air, on a scaffold, and left forgotten, as Indian women were, and we
no more can stand by her grave than we can be sure we stand on the exact
spot where Will Clark built h... |
"And for luncheon," added Jesse, joining readily in the make-believe,
"we'll try some of the cold roast of the last bighorn I killed, over in
the breaks of the Missouri. Not so bad!"Their friend from Mandan looked at them, smiling. "I hope you haven't
shot any tame sheep," said he. "No, not a bad camp, except that the
... |
"Now I want to tell you something very curious--one of those things now
rapidly getting out of record and remembrance. James Kipp lived among
the Mandans and married there. He had a son, Joe Kipp, whom he once took
home to Illinois to educate, after he had left the trade and married a
white woman. He loved Joe, but tol... |
Uncle Dick nodded. "Really the best way to do this would be to take ship
again here and follow the river up the Great Falls," he said; "but by
the time we got a boat rigged and had made the run up--best part of six
hundred miles--we'd be almost a month further into the summer--because
the river is swifter above here. T... |
"No one can estimate the value of the Missouri River to the United
States. It made more history for us than the Mississippi itself. It made
our first maps--the fur trade did that. It led us across and got us
Oregon. It led us to the placers which settled Montana. It took the
first horses and wagons and plows into the u... |
"Now as they came up through the Bad Lands and the upper breaks of the
big river, the explorers gave names to a lot of creeks and buttes, most
of which did not stick. Two of them did stick--the Judith and the
Marias. Clark called the first Judith's river, after Miss Julia Hancock,
of Virginia, the lady whom he later ma... |
"Now the water was getting swift. They knew nothing of what was ahead,
but their load was heavy. So now they hid their biggest boat in the
willows on an island, at the mouth of the Marias, and dug a _cache_ for
a great deal of their outfit--axes, ammunition, casks of provisions, and
much superfluous stuff. They dug thi... |
"No," said John. "To-day is to-day.""All the same," said Jesse, "all the same----"CHAPTER XIXAT THE GREAT FALLS"The only thing," said Jesse, as the three young companions later stood
together on the bank of the river, looking out; "the only thing is----"He did not finish his sentence, but stood, his hands thrust into t... |
"Well, at least the rainbow is left," said Rob, at length, "and the Big
Spring that Clark found is still doing business at the edge of the river
below the smelter above the Colter Fall--cold as it was one hundred and
sixteen years ago, and more than a hundred yards across. Nature
certainly does things on a big scale he... |
CHAPTER XXREADY FOR THE RIVER HEADThe young explorers, used as they were to outdoor life, had no
difficulty in getting their outfit up a long coulee to the level of the
prairie, where a small car quickly carried them into and beyond the city
to a point where another gradual descent led down to the point usually
believe... |
"Well, anyhow, Billy Williams has his camp five or six miles from here,
across, and he has four saddle broncs and two perfectly good mules for
the packs--one plumb black and one plumb white--both ex-army mules and
I suppose fifty years or so old. I think old Sleepy, the white one, is
the wisest animal I ever saw on fou... |
Rob let him up. He staggered around in a circle two or three times,
dazed. "Gee!" said he, laughing at last. "Where'd I drop from?" Then
they all laughed, very gladly, seeing he had only been stunned by the
fall."All right, son?" asked Billy, coming to him anxiously. "I'm sorry! I
didn't know----""My fault, sir," said ... |
"'From the gravel bars along the Missouri and its tributaries gold
dust and nuggets running into millions of dollars have been taken,
and the total production from placer mining through Montana,
including hydraulic mining, from 1862 to 1900 was, probably, not
far from $150,000,000, the total gold produc... |
"But they were bow-and-arrow people, while the Blackfeet had guns that
they got of the traders, far north and east. Two ways the Blackfeet
could get horses--over the Kootenai Trail, where Glacier Park is, or
down in here, where the Shoshonis lived; for the Shoshonis also had
horses--they got them west of the Rockies. S... |
"That's what she is," nodded Billy. "Right here's where Cap'n Lewis
stood and where he said was a good place for a fort--so high, you see,
so no Indians could jump them easy. But they never did build the first
fur fort here; that was higher up, on the Jefferson, little ways."Up yonder's the Gallatin--we're up her valle... |
"Well now, the miners changed more names, too. It was on Willard's
Creek, named after one of the Lewis and Clark men, that they found the
gold at Bannack camp. They called that Grasshopper Creek and left poor
Willard out. And then they called the Philanthropy River, which comes in
from the south, opposite to the Wisdom... |
"Maybe they didn't need it, and maybe their leaders had learned more.
Ever since Lewis picked the right river at the Marias forks, I reckon
the men relied on him more. Then, he'd be poking around shooting at the
sun and stars with his astronomy machines, and that sort of made them
respect him. Clark was a good sport. L... |
"Class dismissed. I see Billy has got the horses." The boys put away
their maps and rolled their beds.All of the party being good packers, it was not long before they had
left their camp ground on the knoll and were off upstream once more,
edging the willow flats and swinging to the ford of the Madison, which
they made... |
Uncle Dick examined it closely."Jesse," said he, "that's one of the most interesting things we've run
across on this whole trip. Did you know that?""No. Why?""You wouldn't think that arrowhead was going to take you to the true
head of the Missouri, and to good fishing for trout and grayling, would
you?""Why, no! How's ... |
"No, not yet. And now comes the most agonizing and most dramatic time in
the whole trip, when it needed the last ounce and the last inch of
nerve. Read us what Lewis said in his _Journal_, Rob. He was on ahead,
and every man now was hustling, because there were the mountains 'right
at them,' as they say down South."Rob... |
"All right. You can see why he went up this upper creek--it was the one
that led straight to the top. The Red Rock River, as they now call the
stream below what they call the Beaverhead River--it's all one
stream--bends off sharp south. The Horse Prairie Creek takes you
straight up to Lemhi Pass, which ought to be call... |
"'August 20th Tuesday 1805 'So-So-ne' the Snake Indians Set out at
half past 6 oClock and proceeded on (met many parties of Indians)
thro' a hilley Countrey to the Camp of the Indians on a branch of
the Columbia River, before we entered this Camp a Serimonious hault
was requested by the Chief and I smok... |
"Gass is at the Great Falls, where Lewis split his party. Ordway is on
his way down the river from the Three Forks to the Falls. Clark is with
the horses now, headed east for the Yellowstone--which not a soul in
that party knew a thing about, except the Indian girl, who insisted they
would come out on the Yellowstone. ... |
"Now, Henry's Lake was named after Andrew Henry, who was chased south
from the Three Forks by the Blackfeet. Just north of there is the low
divide called Raynold's Pass, after Captain Raynolds, a government
explorer, about 1872. Suppose we kept our Monida car that far, and then
sent it back home? Then I could telegraph... |
"Oh, all my life, it seems," she laughed. "I was here early, in the
'nineties, when Mr. Brower came to get to the head of Hell Roaring. That
was in 1895. He and my husband, Mr. William N. Culver, and Mr. Isaac
Jacques went up there horseback. They called that Hell Roaring Canyon
then, and I think most folks do yet, tho... |
"All right!" said Jesse, stoutly. "You see." Accordingly, they rode on
up, slowly, for a little distance, allowing the horses plenty of time to
make their way among rocks and over fallen poles. At last Jesse came to
a halt and dismounted, leading his horse for a way, until he brought up
at the foot of such a tangle of ... |
They turned back down the edge of the depression in the mountain top,
and by deep dusk once more were at the horse camp, where Billy quickly
went to work to find grass and wood. All bore a hand. They got up all
the dry wood they could find, cut stakes for a back log pile of green
logs, spread the half of a quilt back o... |
They now were all willing to vote their experience of the past two days
to be about the pleasantest and most satisfying of any of the trip,
which now they felt had drawn to a natural close. That evening they all,
including their sprightly hostess, bent late over the table, covered
with maps and books."I surely will be ... |
"Well," said Rob, turning to his younger associates, "that seems to give
us a pretty good look in at this whole proposition of the Missouri
River. We have been on the head of the Jefferson Fork; we are going
fishing on the South Fork of the Madison and motor to the head of the
North Fork, inside of Yellowstone Park, if... |
"I think you will find a very small gray hackle will be good. Sometimes
they take the Professor. Just the other day a man came down here with a
little Silver Doctor fly, and they couldn't keep away from it. Sometimes
they take Queen of the Waters--dressed long, like a grasshopper--in the
bright time of the day. If they... |
The blue smoke of their last camp fire on the South Fork rose almost
straight in the still air of a clear summer day as their party sat
around their last breakfast. Although not actually at the end of their
journey, they felt that now they were heading away from these
interesting scenes, so that a sort of sadness fell ... |
"So you can figure now, I reckon," he concluded, "that you are mighty
near at the head of the Gallatin, a day's march from here. And if you
want to, you can take the railroad in town, all the way down the
Yellowstone and clean on home to Chicago or St. Louis, without getting
off the cars.""Well, since we are so near th... |
"Now it would seem that Clark was taking a good many chances, because
all he had done was to write a note which might have been lost, and to
scratch a few words in the sand which might have been washed out. But
the luck of Lewis held until August 11th. On that day, as you remember,
he was accidentally shot through the ... |
"Well, I'll tell you how I feel, after thinking it over," said Uncle
Dick. "I know you hate to say good-by to Sleepy and Nigger, not to
mention our friend Billy Williams here, who is as good a mountain man as
you are apt to find and who surely has been fine to us."But now we are right on a wagon road. There is no excit... |
"So now out of all our travels up to this date, I don't know that there
is any experience we've had that will bring us a much bigger lesson than
this one. Write it in your notebooks--what Meriwether Lewis wrote in his
notebook, that day in the mountains. When you are thirty-one, check back
in your notebooks and see if ... |
Produced by Mark C. Orton and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive/American Libraries.)[Illustration: FRONTISPIECE.]VICE
IN ITS
PROPER SHAPE;
OR, THE
Wonderful and Melancholy
TRANSFORMATION
OF SEVERAL
NAUGH... |
The first room we were conducted into was the habitation of a little
ass, who, as soon as we entered the place, began to bray, and kick up
his heels, at a most violent rate; but, upon the appearance of Mr.
Wiseman (which I have before observed was the Bramin's name) he thought
proper to compose himself, and stood as qu... |
The next room into which we were conducted, contained a fat little pig,
who, as soon as we had entered the door, began to cry _a week_, _a
week_, _a week_, in such a squeaking tone as grated our ears in the
most disagreeable manner: but as soon as Mr. _Wiseman_ produced his
wand, he lowered his pipes to a few sulky gru... |
In one corner of the room where poor _Tony Pig_ was confined, hung a
large cage, which was the prison of a pert young magpie. As soon as my
son _Jacky_ who was the youngest of the company, and remarkably fond of
birds, had saluted her by the well known appellation of _mag, poor
mag_; she wagged her tail with surprising... |
In the next apartment we entered, we saw a little snarling cur, who
immediately saluted us with a surly grin, and barked and yelped as if
he would have torn the house down. He was indeed very securely chained
to a small kennel; but my daughter Betsey happening to venture too near
him, he snapped at her and tore her apr... |
After we had taken our leave of Master _Churl_, we were conducted into
the apartment of Mr. _Pug_, a chattering young monkey, who, as soon as
he saw us whipt his little hat under his arm in a crack, and seating
himself upon his backside, welcomed each of us into the room by several
ceremonious nods, which were intended... |
As soon as we had lifted up the latch to enter into the next apartment,
we were immediately alarmed by a horrid howling; which upon opening the
door we discovered to be the savage musick of a lusty young wolf, who
looked as fierce as if he would have torn every one of us to pieces.
But a strong chain confined his fury ... |
He was equally eminent for his
neatness and dexterity in the art of penmanship; for, even when he was
twelve years old, if you had seen the letter which he then sent to his
mamma without the knowledge of his master, it was wrote so crooked
(i.e.not from side to side as it ought to have been, but from corner
to corner) ... |
In the next apartment we saw a large wire cage, in which the Bramin
told us he had a bird which was something different from the common
ones; and so indeed it was, for upon my eldest daughter's going near to
see it, she was startled by a large serpent which darted itself against
the wires, and hissed and sissed as if i... |
E-text prepared by Julia Miller and the Project Gutenberg Online
Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from digial material
generously made available by Internet Archive
(http://www.archive.org/index.php)Note: Images of the original pages are available through
Intenet Archive. See
http://www.a... |
Put into a saucepan butter size of a pigeon's egg; add 1 pint of soup
stock. When very hot add 3 onions, sliced thin, then a full 1/2 teacup
of flour, stirring constantly that it may not burn. Add 1 pint boiling
water, pepper and salt, and let boil one minute, then placing on back of
range till ready to serve, when add... |
SAUCE.--1/2 cup butter worked to a cream; yolks of 3 eggs beaten in one
by one; juice of 1/2 a lemon; 1/2 teaspoonful salt, 1/4 teaspoon pepper
and 1/2 cup boiling water. Beat and put on stove in a saucepan of
boiling water to thicken.=Brown Fish Chowder.=1 onion fried in butter. Cut any white fish in small pieces and ... |
Take 50 small Eastern oysters with their liquor and a piece of butter.
Drain the oysters very carefully and strain the liquor. Thicken with an
ounce of butter mixed with an ounce of flour. Stir, and boil five
minutes. Finish with the yolks of 3 eggs. Add a little salt, some white
and red pepper and grated nutmeg. Boil ... |
Yolks of 1 or 2 eggs, 3 tablespoons vinegar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 of
mustard, butter size of an egg. Cook like custard.=Clayton's Celebrated Salad Dressing.=Take 3 tablespoonfuls of mustard, mixed quite stiff. Pour on this slowly
1/4 of a pint of best olive oil, stirring rapidly till thick. Then add 3
eggs, and after mix... |
2-1/2 cups flour, 1/2 cup meal, 1 cup milk, 3 eggs, beaten separately, 2
tablespoons butter before melting, 3 teaspoons baking powder, 2 heaping
tablespoons sugar, a little salt.=Corn Bread--No. 2.=1 cup corn meal, 1/2 cup flour, 1 spoon sugar, 1 spoon salt, 1 small
spoon soda, 2 small spoons cream of tartar, 1 egg, en... |
1-1/2 cups sugar, 1/2 of butter, 1/2 of milk, 1-3/4 of flour, 1/4 pound
of Baker's chocolate, 3 eggs, 2 teaspoons baking powder. Scrape the
chocolate fine and add 5 tablespoons of sugar to it (this in addition to
1-1/2 cups). Beat the butter to a cream. Gradually add sugar, beating
all the while. Add 3 tablespoons of b... |
4 eggs, 1 cup powdered sugar, 1 of flour, 1 teaspoon cream tartar, 1/2
teaspoon saleratus, 1 tablespoon cold water. Sift the sugar, flour and
cream tartar together; then add eggs, and stir together ten minutes; add
water, soda and flavoring, and bake in biscuit-pan. To make jelly roll,
lay on bread-board, spread with j... |
White of 1 egg, 1 heaping cup sugar, beat egg till it foams. Add sugar
and flavoring, and stir very thoroughly.[Illustration]PIES.=Puff Paste.=Equal quantities of butter and flour by weight, the butter to be washed.
The yolk of 1 egg. Divide butter in three or four parts and chill; chop
one portion into the flour, mix ... |
1 cup sugar, 1 quart milk, yolks of 5 eggs, white of 1, and vanilla. Let
the milk boil, then add eggs and sugar, and let cool. Crush and strain 1
pint strawberries, 2 tablespoons sugar and whites of 4 eggs, beaten
stiff. Place the custard in glasses, about half full, then fill glasses
with strawberry juice and the whit... |
1/2 pound flour, 1/4 pound lard, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 of yeast powder,
enough cold water to make a stiff dough. Roll-out pastry. Cut with
biscuit-cutter twice as many pieces as you have apples. Peel and core
the apples. Put one round of pastry on one end of the apple. Fill the
core-hole with sugar, cinnamon and a piece o... |
1 pound sugar to 1 pint juice. Heat sugar in oven while the juice comes
to a boil; add sugar, and boil four or five minutes.=Pineapple Preserve.=Pare and grate pineapples, 3/4 pound sugar to 1 pound fruit. Put fruit
and sugar on together, and when it comes to a boil let it cook twenty
minutes.=Preserved Grapes.=Eight p... |
=Fort McDowell Egg Nog.=1 egg and about 1/2 pint of milk to each person. A teacup of sugar to
every quart of milk, and 1/2 pint of best brandy. Beat the yolk, add the
sugar, and beat till it is a froth like cake; then add the brandy, then
the beaten whites, then the milk. Whipped cream in place of the milk is
very nice... |
CAKE--
Almond Drop Cake, 43
Angel Cake, 43
Apple Cake (in layers), 47
Bread Cake, 55
Chocolate Cake--No. 1, 45
" " No. 2, 45
" " No. 3, 46
" Loaf Cake, 46
" Caramel Cake, 46
Coffee Cake, 53
Cold Water Cake, 49
Cookies, Boston, 53
... |
SOUPS--
Asparagus, 8
Bean, 5
Black Bean, 5
Beef, 4
Bisque, 4
Bouillon, 3
Caramel, for Coloring, 9
Celery, 6
Cream of Celery, 6
Mock Bisque, 5
Mushroom, 7
Ox-Tail, 7
Pea, Green, 6
Pea, Grandmother Sawtelle's, 6
Pea, Split, 5
Potato, 8
Soup a la Minute, ... |
Produced by Keith G. RichardsonTHENEW TESTAMENTOF OURLORD AND SAVIOR JESUS CHRIST.THE COMMON ENGLISH VERSION, CORRECTED BY THE FINALCOMMITTEE OF THE AMERICAN BIBLE UNION.Second Revision.[_Willingham Memorial_.]NEW YORK:AMERICAN BIBLE UNION.LONDON:TRUBNER & CO., 60 PATERNOSTER ROW.1866._2d Thousand_.] ... |
(19)But when Herod was dead, behold, an angel of the Lord appears in a
dream to Joseph in Egypt, (20)saying: Arise, and take the child and
his mother, and go into the land of Israel; for they are dead who
sought the child's life. (21)And he arose, and took the child and his
mother, and came into the land of Israel. (22... |
(20)For I say to you, that except your righteousness shall exceed that
of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of
heaven.(21)Ye heard that it was said to those[5:21] of old: Thou shalt not
kill; and whoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment.
(22)But I say to you, that every one who... |
(25)For this cause I say to you, take not thought for your life, what
ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor for your body, what ye shall
put on. Is not the life more than food, and the body than raiment?
(26)Behold the birds of the air, that they sow not, nor reap, nor
gather into barns; and your heavenly Father fe... |
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