Logs @ Rarotonga, Cook Islands

February 14, 2019 · Posted in Cook Books · Comment 

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Logs @ Rarotonga, Cook Islands
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Image taken from page 107 of ‘[Old Touraine. The life and history of the famous châteaux of France.]’
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Title: "[Old Touraine. The life and history of the famous châteaux of France.]"
Author: COOK, Theodore Andrea – Sir
Shelfmark: "British Library HMNTS 10169.eee.1."
Volume: 01
Page: 107
Place of Publishing: London
Date of Publishing: 1898
Publisher: Rivingtons
Edition: Third edition, revised.
Issuance: monographic
Identifier: 000773256

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Image from page 71 of “Houston Civic Club cook book, 1906” (1906)
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Identifier: houstoncivicclub00unse
Title: Houston Civic Club cook book, 1906
Year: 1906 (1900s)
Authors:
Subjects: Cooking, American — Texas
Publisher: Houston, Tex. : V.Z. Crawford, 1906
Contributing Library: Houston Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation

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Text Appearing Before Image:
utter, mix with flour thor-oughly ; then add the water and roll out into pie paste. MRS. GEO. M. SEAMAN. LEMON PIE. The juice and the rind of one lemon, two eggs, eight heapingtablespoonsful of sugar, one small teacupful of milk, one tea-spoonful of corn starch; mix the corn starch with a little ofthe milk and put the remainder on the fire, and, when boiling,stir in the corn starch and boil one minute. Let this cool andthen add the yolks of the eggs, four heaping tablespoonsfulof sugar and the grated rind and juice of the lemon all wellbeaten together. Have a deep pie plate lined with paste andfill with the mixture; bake slowly; beat the whites of eggs toa stiff froth and gradually beat into them the remainder ofthe sugar. Cover the pie with this and brown slowly. MRS. SOPHIE WOLFF. LEMON PIE. Take one lemon, grate off the rind also grating the pulpand juice, a piece of butter the size of a lemon, one cupful DIAMON DS You have never had an opportunityto buy diamonds on such easy terms

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0.00 for this white andperfect DIAMOND,mounted in 14-caratTiffany; for cashand per week.

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Image taken from page 129 of ‘[The Voyages of Captain James Cook. Illustrated … With an appendix, giving an account of the present condition of the South Sea Islands, &c.]’

December 6, 2018 · Posted in Cook Books · Comment 

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Image taken from page 129 of ‘[The Voyages of Captain James Cook. Illustrated … With an appendix, giving an account of the present condition of the South Sea Islands, &c.]’
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Image by The British Library
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Title: "[The Voyages of Captain James Cook. Illustrated … With an appendix, giving an account of the present condition of the South Sea Islands, &c.]", "Logs and Journals. Collected Editions"
Author: COOK, James – the Circumnavigator
Shelfmark: "British Library HMNTS 10003.d.9."
Volume: 01
Page: 129
Place of Publishing: London & New York
Date of Publishing: 1852
Publisher: John Tallis & Co.
Issuance: monographic
Identifier: 000772649

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Image from page 6 of “Experiments in the destruction of fly larvae in horse manure” (1914)
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Identifier: experimentsindes118cook
Title: Experiments in the destruction of fly larvae in horse manure
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors: Cook, F. C. (Frank Cummings), 1877-1923 Hutchison, R. H. (Robert Harris), 1886- Scales, F. M. (Freeman Montague), 1880-
Subjects: Flies Control Horses Manure Handling
Publisher: Washington, D.C. : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture
Contributing Library: U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library
Digitizing Sponsor: U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library

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s nearly as possiblethe same in all cages. It will be understood that 10 gallons ofsolution were applied to 8 bushels of manure in all the cage experi-ments mentioned below, unless some other explanation is given.After treatment in this way the doors of the cages were closed andthe flytraps put in place. The cages were examined every day. Theescape of any larva? into the drip pan was noted, and the volumeof the drip water measured and a sample analyzed. A quart sam-ple of manure was removed through the small door at the side ofthe cage after a day or two and the percentage of living and deadmaggots determined. The larval counts of quart samples werevery unsatisfactory so far as indicating the comparative larvicidalvalue of the chemicals, but the results of some of these counts aregiven in the tables. After five to seven days flies began to emerge, and then it was nec-essary to darken the cages with black cloth tacked on the sides, as seen Bui. 118, U. S. Dept. cf Agriculture. Plate I.

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£5 11 a 02t? Pi .2o-o, ,C a;experimentsindes118cook

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Image taken from page 134 of ‘Chapman’s Centenary Memorial of Captain Cook’s Description of New Zealand one hundred years ago. [Extracts from Cook’s three voyages of circumnavigation, edited by George T. Chapman with the assistance of Albin Martin. With p
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Title: "Chapman’s Centenary Memorial of Captain Cook’s Description of New Zealand one hundred years ago. [Extracts from Cook’s three voyages of circumnavigation, edited by George T. Chapman with the assistance of Albin Martin. With plates.]", "Logs and Journals. Abridgments and Adaptations"
Author: COOK, James – the Circumnavigator
Contributor: CHAPMAN, George Thomson.
Contributor: MARTIN, Albin.
Shelfmark: "British Library HMNTS 10491.f.26."
Page: 134
Place of Publishing: Auckland
Date of Publishing: 1870
Publisher: Geo T. Chapman
Issuance: monographic
Identifier: 000772718

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