The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1945-05-17, Page 6Quality You’ll Enjoy
"SALAIIA’
THE TIMES-APVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO,, THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1945
JAMES STREET Y. U.
The James Street Yeung people's
Union held the last meeting of the
season in the church basement on
Sunday evening. May 6 with the
president, Irene Sweet,, presiding*
The theme was “Have faith in God”
and the meeting opened with hymn
181 followed by prayer. A story
was then told by Janet Kestle after
which hymn 152 was sung. The
topic was given by Margarite Pick
ard based on the theme “Have faith
in God” pointing out that we must
have faith in God» ourselves, and in
others, that faith in one of these
is not enough, The meeting closed
with a hymn and the Mizpah ‘Bene
diction.
DEATH OF MRS. GUNNING
The death of Martha Elizabeth
Gunning, wife of Arthur Gunning,
occurred at her home, Main Street,
Granton, on Friday. She was born
in Usborne Township, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Brock and
was in her 79 th year. Mrs, Gunning
had been critically ill for some
months. Sixty years ago she mar
ried Arthur Gunning. They lived
in Bianshard Township for 26
years, moving with their family to
Kirkton and farmed there for 20
years. Fourteen years ago Mr. and
Mrs. Gunning retired and moved to
Granton. Mrs, Gunning was a mem
ber of the United church. Besides
her husband, she,leaves two daugh
ters, Mrs. Clarence Knight, of Us
borne Township, Mrs. Bert Doupe,
Toronto; three
ton; Emerson,
Toronto; two
Bruce Cooper, ___
and Mrs. Thomas Hodgert Seaforth.
Funeral service was conducted by
at the family
at 2 o’clock
Interment was
sons, Newton, Gran-
Exeter; and Ernest,
half-sisters, Mrs.
Usborne Township,
united in service, A
led the singing and
Goodgei’ and Canon
Rev, M. G. Cook
residence, Granton.
Monday afternoon,
in Zion Cemetery, Usborne.
public school children
from their school and
Deputy ' Grand
Jeefferson, of
Warden,
Clinton
ROLFE,
Manager..
bride,
Rhoda
Marion
Later
aUaVerfnh ”1^5-'leSr-a
AFrc servj«, but many m
JFe’re waiting for the green light. When
telephone men and materials are back again,
we’ll resume our rural expansion program
where we left off.
First job of all will be to supply .service
to families on our waiting list. Then
will come such major projects as extending
facilities into new areas; replacing “veteran”
equipment; raising standards of service.
Simply to relieve present crowding on rural
lines will mean running more than 8,000
miles of wire from present pole lines. Then
we’ll need extensions to the pole lines them
selves—some 2,500 miles of them—to reach
additional communities. Wherever we find
one family per half mile of main road
wanting telephones, we plan to construct
pole lines to serve them.
$ 1
c 1
VfCTORy
ISN'T IT TH! TRUTH ?
R WHY, JUNE ! COME 1
ON IN! I DIDN'T KNOW
YOU WERE IN THE V.A.D.
——----------- -----------—
YOU HAVEN'T SEEN
M4E SINCE I ENROLLED
LAST YEAR . NOW, I'VE
FINISHED MY FINAL
^TRAINING HERE
AND WHERE ARE YOU
GOING NEXT ?
TO ENGLAND!
I'VE JUST BEEN 5
POSTED... AND I’M
SO THRILLED
EXETER, ONTARIO
J. W. MORLEY
solicitor
Professional Cards
F. W. GLADMAN
BARRISTER SOLICITOR
KIRKTON
Thaiiksgiving Service
Some five hundred people attend-
Thanksgiving service Tuesday
morning at 11 a.m. in the Kirkton
United Church when Anderson, Mt.
Pleasant and the ‘St. Pauls Angli
can people
union choir
Rev. W. D _ __
James conducted the service using
the program set for the day.. The
Kirkton
marched
occupied the , centre seats along
with theix* teacher, Miss P. Schweit
zer. Blanshard Tow-line school
pupils also marched in a body and
sat with their teacher Mrs. Holden.
Switzer-Robinson
A wedding of interest took place
in Kirkton United Church on Satur
day/ May 5th when Edith Elaine,
youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Archie Robinson, became the bride
of John Maxwell, only son of Mr.
and Mirs. Roy Switzer. Rev. W. D.
Goodger officiated. Mrs. Alex Crago
.played theAvedding music and Miss
Mary Urquhart sang “Because”
during the signing of the register.
The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore a* floor length
gown of white satin and net with a
finger tip veil of white net. She
wore a necklace of pearls, the gift
of the groom, and carried a boquet
of red roses. The bridesmaid, Miss
Marian Kemp, cousin .of the bride,"
wore a floor length gown of pink
sheer and a shoulder length veil of
pink net. She carried a boquet of
pink snapdagon and white carna
tion^1. The groom was attended by
Mr. Jack Urquhart,. &The ushers
were Mr. Robert Robinson, nephew
of the bride, and Mr. Ronald Den
ham.
Following the ceremony a recep
tion was given for forty guests in
the school room of the Church
which was attractively decorated, in
pink and white. The waitresses
were five friends of the
Misses Norma Urquhart,
Kirkby, Ethel Blackler,-
Francis and Mary Urquhart.
the happy couple left amid showers
of confetti for a honeymoon, the
bride travelling in a brown tailored
suit with brown accessories.
THE
at Hensall, Jfriday 2 to 5 p.m.
I
Hello, Homemakers: May is the
month of spring rains, spring flow
ers and new spring hats, But it is
also the month when many people
are thumbing over seed packages.
This year there is as great a neej
as in the past two years for more
individual garden plots. Many of us
in Ontario already have the Victory
Garden habit, we like to see things
growing and we like to grow our
own. Hospitals are taking a tip
from Victory Garden enthusiasts by
using gardening as a healing means
of rehabilitating disabled veterans.
CARROT RING
2 cups rieed, cooked carrots,
3 eggs, well beaten, 3 tbsp,
melted fat, 1 tsp. salt, pepper
to taste.
Mix in the order given and pour
into a well-greased ring mould. Set
the mold in a shallow pan of hot
water an inch deep around the ring
and bake in an electric oven at 350
degrees for 40 mins. Remove from
oven and let stand a few minutes;
then loosen- edges, invert a large
hot plate over the mold and turn
out carefully, it desired, melted
cheese may be paired over the ring
just before serving. Fill the centre
with peas, beans, asparagus or
.creamed fish. Serves 6.
CORN TIM&ALES
1 -cup canned corn, 1
chopped parsley, £ cup of
1 tbsp, chopped onion, 2
slightly beaten salt and pepper
to taste.
Mix the ingredients. Pour into
four greased custard cups, set in
shallow pan containing t about half
an inch of hot water, and bake in
oven at 325 -degrees for about 30
mins, oi'- until a knife blade insert
ed comes out clean. To serve, loos
en the edges and turn out.
Serve with a vegetable plate din
ner, including, green beans, baked
potatoes and broiled tomatoes on
toast rounds.
CASSEROLE MEAT AND
SPAGHETTI
1 onion sliced 1 lb. hamburg
steak, 1 can tomato soup, S
pkg. spaghetti, 1 cup boiling
water, salt and pepper.
Cook the spaghetti until tender
in boiling salted water, then drain
and keep hot. Put a tablespoon of
oil or dripping into hot frying pan
and saute t'he hamburg until brown
stirring occasionally. Brown onion
in hot fat and stir occasionally un
til well browned. Put in one cup of
boiling'water cover and simmer 15
mins., then add the cooked. spa
ghetti, the salt, pepper and tomato
soup.
MACARONI AND CHEESE
1% cups macaroni
in IL- inch lengths),
pepper to taste 1 tsp.
tard, 1 cup rich milk,
more grated cheese.
Cook macaroni until barely ten
der in boiling salted water. Drain,
tbsp,
milk
eggs,
(broken
salt and
dry mus-
1 cup or
PENTECOSTAL W.M.C.
District I.O.O.F. Elects
The No. 8 district annual meet
ing of the I.O.O.F. met at Bruce-
field Lodge with the District Dep
uty Grand Master, Ross Scott,
presiding. The officers elected for
the coming term were: District
Deputy Grand Master, Jack Thomp
son, of Fidelity Lodge, Seaforth;
District
George
Lodge. Exeter members in attend
ance were Garnet Hicks, Wm. Cann
and .Clark Fisher. .
No. 74
Pwi’SH I WERE GOING
WITH YOU ! BUT I SIMPLY
CAN'T AFFORD TO JOIN J
k THE V.A.D. y-----—...... ......-*•/------------—
►-------------"WHY NOT?
WE'RE PAID,YOU KNOW...
WITH EVERYTHING FOUND
...AS WELL AS A
UNIFORM ALLOWANCE^
"IN THE SERVICE
OF MANKIND”
The women of Canada have
enrolled by the hundreds in
the Volunteer Aid Detach
ment of the St. John Ambu
lance Brigade. «.servi ng i nthe
true spirit of St. John service*
But there is still a pressing*
heed for more. Apply to your
provincial V.A.D, officer if
Local Brigade Headquarters.
JOHN LABATT LIMITED
London Canada
add salt and pepper, and mustard
dissolved in a little of the milk,
Stir
will
the
and
to sprinkle generously over the top.
Turn into a greased casserole, top
with grated cheese and bake in an
electric oven at
lightly browned,
*
TAKE
well, so that the seasonings
he well distributed throughout
macaroni, then add the milk
cheese, saying enough cheese
Office, Main Street,
EXETER, ONT.
350 degrees until
veg
open
* ♦
A TIP
1. In chooseing a new area for
etables be sure to select an
' space where the sun will pour in
and excess mojsture will be
drained away. Few vegetables
flourish in soggy damp soil.
2. Ploughing or deep hand spading
should be followed by breaking
up the soil until it crumbles
finely and until fertilizers are
evenly mixed in. Vegetables re
quire well fertilized land. Rake
the part of the bed which you
are preparing for seeding down
smooth, leaving the remainder in
semi rough state until seeding
time. Some
■tender than,
planted until later.
Varieties essential to health can
be grown in > very small space—
for instance, carrots, lettuce par-
,sley, beans and the all-impOrtant
tomato. Even a sunny window
box can grow vitamins in
form of parsley or chives.* *
QUESTION BOX
says: Tell me how
popovers stand up.
When you bake pop-
seeds being more
others will not be
3.
the
THE
Mrs. B.J.
make crisp
Answer: _
overs have the baking pans sizzling
hot before you pour in the mixture
Grease them generously and heat
in the oven until hot. (Electric ov
en should be preheated or top ele
ment turned off).
Our rule for crisp popovers is
this: Sift together 1 cup flour and
1 tsp. salt. Beat 2 eggs. Add 1 cup
milk and '2 tsps, melted shortening.
Add to the flour and beat several
mins. Pour into heated cups and
cook in electric oven, 45 0 degrees,
for 15 mins. Turn off the oven,
open the door and leave in oven 5
or 8 mins, more to crisp.
Mrs. N.D. says: We’re very fond
of vegetable loaf for supper. Chop
ped mixed vegetables are thor
oughly mixed with egg and crumbs
Use 2 eggs and ,2/3 cup dry crumbs
for a quart of vegetables and don’t
forget- to season well. Bake in a
moderately heated electric oven for
%. hours.
Mrs. J.M. says: Ever try flavour
ed bacon—roll back bacon around
a section of dill pickle, then broil
it. It takes on a pleasing flavour.
* * *
Anne Allan invites you to write
to her %The Times Advocate. Send
in your suggestions on homemak
ing problems and watch the column
for replies.
you
*
Dr, G. F. Roulston, L.D.S., D.D.S,
DENTIST
Offices, Morley Block
EXETER, ONT,
Closed Wednesday Afternoon
Dr, H. H. Cowen, L.D.S., D.D.S,
DENTAL SURGEON
Main Street, Exeter
Office 36w Telephones Res. 353
Closed Wednesday Afternoons
C. E. ZURBRIGG
Optometrist at Exeter
Open every week day except
Wednesday
ARTHUR WEBER
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
For Huron and Middlesex
FARM SALES A SPECIALTY
PRICES REASONABLE
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Phone 57-13 Dashwood
R.R. No. 1, DASHWOOD
FRANK TAYLOR
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
For Huron and Middlesex
FARM SALES A SPECIALTY
Prices Reasonable a,nd Satisfa'ctiou
Guaranteed
EXETER P.O, or RING 13S
WM. H. SMITH
licensed
For Huron
Special training
property’s true
AUCTIONEER
and Middlesex
assures you of you?-
value on sale day-
Graduate of American Auction
College
Terms Reasonable and Satisfaction*
Guaranteed
Crediton P.O. or Phone 43-2
E. F. CORBETT
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
Terms Reasonable. Satisfaction.
Guaranteed.
EXETER, R.R. 1
Phone Zurich '92r7
The May meeting was held in the
church on May 10. The meeting
was in charge of Mrs. E. Millar
and opened by singing “We shall
see the King” and “Leaning on the
Everlasting Arms” after which Mrs.
Kendrick led in prayer. Roll call
was answered by favourite verse of
Scripture. The minutes of the last
meeting were read and adopted.
The business was then dealt with
and it was decided to quilt on
Tuesday, May 15. Psalm 86 was
read alternately. Mrs. R. T. Mc
Donald read an acount of part of
■the life of Samuel Morris. Hymn
“It is joy Unspeakable” was sung
and Mrs. Edgar Cudmore gave an
address on The Rich Young Ruler.
A short 'time was spent in prayer
and’ thanksgiving for Victory and
for our missionaries. The -meeting
closed by singing “Deeper, Deeper
in the Love of Jesus” and Mrs. E.
Millar closed with prayer.
GRAND bend
Mr. and Mirs. Wm. Beer and Miss
May Skinner visited with Mrs. Al
ma Mollard on Sunday.
Miss Doris iBakdr has returned
a visit in Hamilton for a
and Mrs. Ed. Strathmier
the week-end with Mirs.
after
week.
Mr.
spent
Eccleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moody and
family visited over the weekend
with Mrs. Ethel Moody.
‘Mr. and Mrs. M!ax Turnbull Were
in Toronto on Frday and Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Gill returned
Monday from a month’s visit with
their son, Russell, of Brampton.
Mrs. Lewis, of Crediton, spent
the week-end with her daughter,
Mrs. Alex Hamilton.
Mr. Dick Hamilton, who is in St.
Joseph’s Hospital, is recovering
nicely after an operation for appen
dicitis.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Green visit
ed in' Sarnia on Saturday.
USBORNE & HIBBERT MUTUAL.
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Head Office, Exeter, Ontario
Pres............... WM. A. HAMILTON
R. R. 1, Cromarty
Vice-Pres. ,...... WM. H. COATES'
Exeter -
DIRECTORS ,
THOS. G. BALLANTYNE: Woodham*
JOHN HACKNEY .... 1
ANGUS SINCLAIR ....
JOHN McGRATH .....
AGENTS
JOHN ESSERY .........
ALVIN L.. HARRIS ...
thos. scott .....
Kirkton, R. 1LVX1 XV LVJJLw* a
Mitchell R. -1
Dublin, Ont..
B.
Centralia.
Mitchell
Cromarty*
SECRETARY-TREASURER
w. F, BEAVERS ........... Exeter
D
F. W. GLADMAN
Solicitor, Exet'er
ELIMVILLE
(To late for last week)
Miss Joy Whitlock, of St. Thom
as, was a week-end visitor with
relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Sparling and Hazel
and Mrs. Sparling, Sr, attended the
Memorial service of a relative who
was killed overseas, at Anderson oh
Sithday last.
Miss Dorothy Johns had her ton
sils removed last
Godbolt’s Hospital
in.g nicely.
•Next Sunday,
there will be a combined service at
10 a»m, There will be several babies
baptized at this service.
Miss Ada Andrew, of Exeter,
s'pent a day last week at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Rich Johns on
her return from Victoria Hospit
al where she spent a couple , of,
weeks' undergoing treatment.
Mr. Will Johns attended, the
meeting ef the Presbytery at rG.dd*
erich last .‘ThUrs’day, Mrs. Will
Jojihs and -Mrs. U." E.' Pooiey at
tended the w.M.S. Presbytetfal also
held In Godferich the same day.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville MeGuffin,
Mr. Alton Perkins and MiiSses Marie
and Ruby Perkins, of Thorndale,
visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. Johns on Sunday last.i
Saturday at Mrs,
and is recover
Mother’s Day,
STAFFA
The annual meeting of >Staffa
Women's Institute was held at the
home of Mrs. G. W. Butson.
C. D. Cline,
chair. __ ___ ___ ___
hate $25.00 to Mitchell Red Cross.
Election of officers resulted as fol
lows: Honorary president, Mrs.
James Hill; president, Miss E. B.
Davies; vice-presidents,
man and Mrs. W. Houghton;
rotary-treasurer,
assistant, Mrs.
pianist, Mrs. L,
tant, Mrs, O. W.
ectors ’Mrs, W. Reed, Mrs. W.J Fell
Mi’s. D. McKellar and Mrs.
Colquhouu; district ’ director,
W.,Reed.
Mrs.
president Was ill the
The members decided to do-
F°RD,4i tsH0T els!
■fltswl;!*FIRtMWOF
► HOTHI
OtMHKMW
WCATEB •
KHOum
El
i
1
Mrs. Bowfc
sec
Mrs, L. Hodge;
George Butson;
Cdlqulioun; assis-
Reed; branch dir-
L,
Mrs.
WINCHELSEA
Quite, a-.number,, ffom, this'
inanity attended the V-E.
celebrations in Exeter on Tuesday
afternoon, last and tlie church ser
vices in Thanied Hoad church on
Tuesday1evening, also ‘ “
Sunday,
Mr. and Mrs, WiiL
Margatet visited on
conf-
Day
lit Exeter on
Walters and
Sunday With
and Mrs. Nelson Clark, of'
Farquhar,
MV, and Mrs. Jas. Horne spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. F. V..
Holme.
Mrs.
Elimville, visited
With Mrs, Frank
Lloyd 'Hern.
Mr, and Mrs,
'alid Ivan spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs, Goldwyn Glenn, of Brin
sley* :
Mr, Jack Delbridge and Kevin, of'
Exeter, vifftted Oil Stinday at the
liofne of Mr. Chas. DeJbridgh.
Mr. and Mrs, Hatty YPoiYl land
Gordon, Mrs. P, Dicky and family'
spent Friday evenihg with Mr. and'
Mrs. Freemaii/Horne.
Rich Johns and Bessie, of
on Wednesday
Brock ahd Mrs.
Sherwood Brock
i-
The Want Ads are your depart-
mcnt.—Use them.