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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1969-12-25, Page 18NOTICE. CONCERNING AMBULANCE :SERVICE An Ambulance Despatch Centre To Serve the Seaforth District As Arranged By the Ontario Hospital Services Commission Is Now In Operation At Seaforth Community Hospital. 1 • All Calls for Ambulance Service Under the OHSC Ambulance Prograni Should be Directed to the Ambulance Despatch Centre CALL 27-1751 r 2 4754 on 4, welecig, ARNOLD. STINNISSEN ' Phone 527-9410 SUN LIFE REPRESENTATIVE Seaforth 0142#14DardPa at- r t I '2;# 4 17 WANT',ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS': Dial 527-0240 It is our occasion for small foo-, 'place the greeting with prose, nonetheless warm for being that. To our friends, wherever they may be, engaged in whatever project they may be at, we send greetings and salutations. • May theirs , be a Merry Christmas, blessed by much. lishnegses. It is the magic Qf being good, the chorus of well- being. It has been the custom op this page these past few years to salute in verse our friewis, at Christmas. This year the poor tired music is silent ,,and we re- Menu of the Week Creamed Turkey Crepes Carrot and Celery Sticks Mixed Pickles Mincemeat Bars Turkey-filled' crepes are a .great mid-day brunch or late evening lunch idea. Prepare them ahead of time and freeze, then simply warm them in the oven' for unhurried, elegant entertain- ing, .suggest. the Ontario Food Council. Crepes 3/4 cup Ifted flour 1/4 tspn. salt 2 eggs 1 cup milk 1 tbspn. melted butter • Filling 1 gyeen pepper, minced 1 tbspn. butter 1 10-oz. can mushroom soup 1A4 pcuimp 1 e m il k, n o cut into strips 1 /6 tspn. curry powder 1 cup cooked turkey, finely chopped 1. Combine flour and salt. Beat eggs slightly and' add milk. 2. Add egg-milk' mixture to dry ingredients and , beat until smooth. 3. Stir in melted butter. 4. Cover and chill batter for 2 hours. 5. For each crepe, measure 2 tbspns. of batter intd a hot, lightly greased, 7-inch frying pan, tilting the pan to spread batter 'quickly and evenly over the bottom. Cook 1 to .2 minutes, until bottom is brown. Turn. Cook 1 minute longer., 6. As crepes are cooked, stack them with paper towelling be- tween each crepe.. Makes about 12 crepes. 7. Saute green pepper in butter Every week more and more people discover what mighty Jobs are accomplished by low cost ExpOsitor 0 Wont Ads, Dial 57.01, ' • SPAPPRIIIfi Mews of • F it MaY the Chrii4044 Star' guide us to thg'peanO and happiness. the - Wise Men feint(' in Bethlehem. Our warm- est gre.etings to you and, Yours. 'shOwtIIK the different. -0t;*. b04 • on a sketch board wet* ettIO by Misses JAW Sitertte,ed,and Karen CguttS for •Wal$PII IIPON. • Mrs. W411414 • lippplA100- gre. •pe.reld Watson were 14r rented -with 040 from the; 016! In theirchtb. Mrs* Allan •Mc011 and Mrs. Allan. Searle for .O100 ,I had been presented with gifts.at an earlier meeting.• - • The sounds of Santa's Sleigh- bells,fill the air with music, and every hoine is kindled with the warmth of good cheek. May you and your family enjoy all the blessings of this happy holiday Simon. Heartfelt thanks for your trust and support. We greatly enjoy the, irivilege of serving you.' A Merry Christina" , from the Management and Staff of . • I. 4 COrresppwjeA, MrS. n. Ends The chriatma,s Meeting' 01 the Walton WeInentS Institute was held on Wednesday evening in the Community Hall. The hall vas decorated with, lighted Christmas trees and displays of the two 4-H Girls Clubs'. work. Mrs. Alvin McDonald opened the meeting and Mrs. Herb Wil- liamson and Mrs. George McCall were the conveners for the Reso- lutions' Committee. Mrs. Wil- llamSon, introduced the 4-y Girls and Miss Lorna Cooper spoke on the 'Traditions in Embroidery' for Walton I. Needle, Pushers. 'Creating with Embroidery' and SPECIAL FERTILIZER PRICES rs‘L 6 - 24 - 24 $61.00 Ton 8 - 32 -16 $68.00 Ton 15 15 -15 $57.25 Ton linonium Nitrate - $62.00 Ton RICES ARE FOR TRUCKLOAD LOTS DELIVERED TO YOUR FARM ) • ORDER TO-DAY! OFFER GOOD UNTIL MONDAY, DEC. 29th ONLY Mrs.'4QeOrge McCall read 11.' Christmas poem. Mrs. Neil 140- ' Gavin with Mrs. Herb Tray.iss accompanying on the piano sang 'All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth' and th& both sang a dhet 'White Christmas'. • Mrs. Earl Cudmore of Brus- sels was introduced by Mrs. Wil- liamson and she displayed and demonstrated many, artistic and pretty Christmas table decora- tions. A gift was presented by Mrs. George McCall On behalf of the Institute. Christmas carols were played by Mrs. Ray Huether. Mrs. Alyin McDonald con- ducted the business. Minutes were read by Mrs. William Hum- phries and the roll call was answered with a Christmas carol or greeting. A short course 'Main Dish Makes the Meal' with lea- ders, Mrs. Mac Sholdice and Mrs. Neil McGavin will be presented January 12 and, January 19 in the Church basement. A letter was read from the Wingham Branch of the Cancer Society thanking the members for the gifts re- ceived. Committees in charge of the Progressive Euchre parties will be: Jaluary 9th, Mrs. Allan Mc- Call, Mrs. James Nolan, Mrs. Nelson Reid, Mrs. Ray..Huether and Mrs. Herb TravisSz.' January 23rd, Mrs. Jan Van Vliet, Sr., Mrs. Ronald Bennett, Mrs. Don Achilles, Mrs. Ralph TrIviss and Mrs.'Jim Axtmann. Donations are to be sent to the McDonald Institute fm. fees (25C a member). A giftick C5hristmas will be 'sent to the nshine Sister at Huronview. 'The lucky draw was won by Mrs. Alvin McDonald. A bake sale Of fan of the cookies was held at the close evening. Lunch was served by Mrs. 11..,Traviss, Mrs, Mac Shol- dice, Mrs. Graham' -Sholdice, Mrs. William Humphries and Mrs. Margaret Humphries. Use Expositor Want =Ads Phone 527-0240 by F. B, W. in the Winnipeg Free PresS The wonderful climax has' come at last and alj the wondrous days of .watchifik and waiting are over. it, x _ The streets are winking with a thousand colored lights, the stockings a...e hung and in the morning the enchanting miracle of the great day will come to pass. The wonder of Christmas is the freshness of it, new and whitely shining like the snow which-has litery fallen upon the city, as though it had never been before. There is 'no other 'day like it, no other occasion of such glittering innocence and univer- sal Joy. 'Nobody shoots Santa Claus', Al Smith remarked once in ,dt moment of frustration and bit- ' terness, but the reason was not thetreason he suggesced. No one shoots' Santa Claus because no one in his, senses shoots him- self and Santa Claus is a seg- ment of the huipan heart dressed up in white whiskers and allay- ed to parade unashamedly before the public eye. FERVENT HOPE Most of us hide Santa Claus deep inside us and hope fer- vently that he will not be seen lurking in the inner fastnesses of the human spirit. We hide him, that is,' for all the year, until Christmas and then by com- mon convention we parade him' • ,Y o r For a m weeks oment. ,now we have been 4ravelling towards this day, the parade gathering Strength, the ;bells jingling a little louder the holly shining brighter, the 'excitement growing keener. We ' ,start• early these days, and lose nothing for it though those of as who are older and possess lees stamina may find-the dis- tance long and the way somewhat 'hard. But those for ,whom the day is specially made see the distance as a skip and a hop quid the journey a brief peep into wonderland. On this day with Verson Woodforde we light the big candle and the glitter of it is seen in strange places and under terrible conditions. Odd Nansen, 'surrounded by horror and death in a Nazi con- centration camp could stand alone in the' dark of the compound and feel the tug of it. Canadians, sick With fever and racked with hunger, could save the'veagre rations provided by their Japan- ese captors to celebrate the oc- casion. Lonely men inunfamiliar :surroundings could gather to- ether the trappings of it and 1.t arin theinielves in their Soli- ary memories, Nothing we have done tittiirlatnias has been able to tarnish the radiance of it or mar the wonder of the occasion. It survives poverty and wealth; it thrive§ on simplicity or sophis- tication, faith and doubt. All this has sprung from great events many centuries ago to be- come a day both intimate and public, a day of giving and re- ceiving, a day of modern trap- pings and ancient and mysterious symbolism, a day which pushes aside the dull details of daily living and buries 'them beneath the silver an$1 gold and colored lights, the green boughs and soft brown pine cones. It' is the soaring magnificence of the Hallelujah.Chorus and the humble invitation of '0 Come All Ye Faithful'. It is 'Tnat glorious Form, that Light un- sufferable, And that far beaming blaze of Majesty', and the lines of John Finney in, the old Christ- mas' play, went up a straight crooked lane, I met a bark and he dogged at me, I went to the stick and cut a hedge'. EVERYMAN'S TOWN It is the excitement of New York and the strange quiet of London; it, is Parliament Hill in Ottawa, with the carillon peal- ing out with sharp and echoing notes, 'Silent Night, Holy Night' and the snow falling softly through the crisp cold air; it is every- man's town. It is Bob eratchit's Christ- mas feast . . . 'a smell like an eating house and a pastry cook's next door to each other, with a lanndress's next door to that! That was' the pudding! . . . like a speckled cannon ball, so hard and firm, blazing in half of half a quartern of ignited brandy, and bedight with Christmas holly stuck into the top'. It is all these things but much more than any of them, it is a day dedicated to the wide eyes of young children, to those first unforgettable looks at a world of glitter and color, .to a morning where the first warmth of the fire is killing off the night chill and daWn is only a grey hint on the far horizon. It is a tree laden. such as grows only on the Big Rock Candy Mouritaia, Surrounded by colored Nils of tissue paper. OPENING OF PARCELS It is the rustle of opening parcels and the muted gasps greeting the shining newness. It is the stripping off of years and the floating return of early Memories. It is happiness, sharp to the point of pain and laughter skirting along a pool of tears. It is all these thing's and There. until tender. 8. Add rest of ingredients and heat through. To fill the crepes: Place a heap- ing tablespoonful of filling on each crepe. Roll up as you would a jelly roll. place in a single layer in in oven-proof dish. Pour remaining sauce over top. To freeze: Cover dish seeureiy with foil. Chill, then freeze. To serve: Baket at 400 deg.F. for .10 minutes or until sauce bubbles. * * * * * * BREAD: SAVORY SNACKS Unexpected guests? You're caughts without any treats to serve? That loaf of bread in your. cupboard could save'the day. These savory bread snacks from the' Food Department, MacDonald Institute, take only a moment to prepare, FAN TANS In a loaf pan, Place day-old loaf of sliced bread, top side up. Spread slices and the top with one of the recipes given below. Bake at 425 deg. F. for 15 minutes. If only part of a loaf is used; prop it us with a custard cup. Cheese.; Between slices, spread a butter and prepared mustard mixture, grated cheese, cheese spread, or cheese slices. Top the loaf with a bit of mayonnaise, grated cheese, and diced onion. Bake. Herb: Mix margarine or butter with one of: minced onion, ce- lery or garlic salt, dried thyme, curry or chili powder. Spread betWeen slices and on tap.Sprin,- kle with paprika, celery Seen. pOppyseads, Bake. Relish: Mint margarine or butter with a little garlic salt. Add lone oft prepared mustard, horSe, redish, , minced posiey or blue cheese. Spread betWeen, site and On top. Bake. -• STEWART BROS. The Meatiiiig of chrigtMag t * N ' f • Ai rl ••••. 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