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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1946-10-10, Page 6Page 6 IT'S EVERY* ©©DY'S BUSINESS Every tourist dollar is shared this way: 1. Hotels; 2. Stores; 3. Restaurants; 4. Taxes, etc.; 5. Amusements; 6. Garages. "Lefs make them want to come back!” SALADA Two million or more motorists from the States visit us each year . . . thousands of them just for the beauty of our Ontario countryside. Let’s see to it that our hospitality matches the perfection of our lakes and hills. 2‘j THE TIMES^ARVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER lQtb, J946 ♦ Ontario profits almost as much from tourist business as from gold mining. It’s up to us to keep this business growing. axxic PUBLISHED IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST BY JOHN LABATT LIMITED PLANNING A HOLIDAY? Tune in "Ontario Holiday” CFRB, 10:30 p.m.r Thursday, Friday and Saturday •z* Address and Rr<?s?ntatiQn The Pentecostal Assembly of Exeter -met at the 'home of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Cudmore on the eve­ ning oi September 27th to honor Miss Shirley Vandudevarde on the eve of her departure to attend the Pentecostal Bible School in Toron­ to. The evening was spent in mus­ ic, singing and Bible contests un­ der the direction of Don Jolly. The following address was read and a purse presented by Jean Triebner. Dear Shirley:— All too soon the time .has come that we lose you from our midst. Our fellowship has been pleasant and profitable and we 'hope will foe soon and often renewed. Your cheerfulness, faithfulness and will­ ingness to be used in the Master's service have been a good example and inspiration to us all. We admire your preseverence in the continuance of your life purpose and we shall be continually inter­ ested in your progress as you fol­ low where He leads, We are sure that your bright and positive testi­ mony will continue'to be as help­ ful to others as it has been to us and we wish you God-speed as you occupy until the Lord comes. Please accept this small token of our Christian love and esteem with our best wishes for your pro­ gress. (Signed) The Exeter Pentecostal Assembly. •ley made a very fitting reply, expressing her thanks and testify­ ing to the saving grace of our Lord and to her desire to be used of Him to win souls. Then all joined hands singing “It will be worth it all when we see Jesus,” and 11 be the tie that binds.” After a ly lunch -Mr. Cudmore closed prayer. Money is on Gardiner As Successor to Kins (From “Backstage At Ottawa,” Maclean’s Magazine) It was a personal triumph for Hon. Jimmy Gardiner when In the the British Wheat contract was finally signed —- hardly another Cabinet Minister liked it, the Prime Minister least of all. And even though Mr, Gardiner won in the end, his friends regard the Government’s delay in accepting the contract as a dastardly plot, with 'Mackenzie King at the bottom of it, 'to smash the Gardiner mach­ ine in Saskatchewan and crowd Gardinei* out of the race for Lib­ eral leadership. They say Mr, Gardiner intended to announce the conclusion of the wheat contract in his first speech of the Morse by-election campaign, where Gardinei* Liberals were work­ ing like beavers, but where other Liberals were sitting on the side­ lines not even cheering. However, when Mackenzie King took ship for home from England, the contract looked like a reasonable certainty. No sooner had he landed than it Mr. elec- was Mrs. Doupe Able To. Be Out Friends of Mrs. Amos Doupe were pleased to see her down town on Saturday evening. Mrs. Doupe, who is 81 year® old, fell and broke her hip in June last ‘and spent thirteen weeks in 'hospital. She makes her home with (her son, Mr. Reg. Doupe and Mrs. Doupe on St. John st.. East Ward, and can get around pretty good now, with help, —(St. Marys JournaVArgus. CENTRALIA Ml and Mrs. Lloyd Hodgson en­ joyed a trip to Sault Ste. Marie with their with Professional Cards __________ E________________________________ r I Blest love- with held --------_—-------- GREENWAY Anniversary services will he in the United Church next Sunday at 2.45 p.m. and 7.30 p.m. . * Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kennedy ‘and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kennedy, of Bad Axe, Mich., visited on Sun­ day with their aunt, Mrs. Albert Pollock. Mr. Russell Brown, who has been seriously ill, is improving. Mr. Seibourne English, of Detroit is spending a few days at his home here. Misses Eunice and of London, spent with their parents, Lawrence Curts. Mr. and Mrs. Russell of Ferndale, Mich., week- end with relatives. Miss Marion Woodburn entertain­ ed a .number of friends to a birth­ day party on Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Levina Kennedy, of Bad Axe, Mich., is visiting with her sister,. Mrs. Albert Pollock. Loreen the Mr. Curts, week-end and Mrs. Mclntosh, spent the was indefinitely postponed. Gardiner’s big speech to the tors of Morse constituency ruined. He blamed Mr. King. C.'C.F.-ers are a little annoyed by all this recrimination among the Grits. They won a smacking victory in Morse, and they claim they’d have won it anyway. But at least it’s a fail* inference that the rift in Liberal ranks did them no harm. And it’s an even safer guess that the Morse defeat was a bad setbabek for the Gardiner supporters iat the Saskatchewan Convention this year, and for Mr. Gardiner himself at the National Liberal Convention, whenever it comes. You can still find plenty of sea­ soned observers in Ottawa whose money in on Jimmy Gardinei* for the next Liberal leader. Gardiner is a politician’s politi­ cian. He believes in all the things dear to a ward heeler’s heart— plenty of patronage, jobs for the faithful, no money for political foes or mugwumps, dollars for voters on all possible occasions, and a well- oiled machine. 'He and Prime Minister King don’t get along very well, but that’s noth­ ing against Mr. Gardiner now that the P. M. is retiring and his wrath is no longer to foe feared. In the battle for the succession it may even be a source of strength. There are other powerful Grits (Angus Mac­ donald, for one) who dislike Mack­ enzie King and all his host. In powerful Quebec Mr. Gardiner has reason to hope for support. Quebeckers have not forgotten how he fought the Ku Klux Klan in Sas­ katchewan 16 years ago, and lost to the Anderson Government in a campaign heavily saturated with racial and religious prejudices. Nor has Quebec any particular allergy to the ‘’practical” politics Mr. Gar­ diner knows so well. “Up to the 1945 election I’d have been a Gardiner man myself,” said one Quebec MJP. “But if he can’t hold his own province, and takes his iown seat by 20-odd votes, how can he win all Canada?’’ However, Doug Abbott, the odds- on-fayiprite of a few months ago, is losing ground1 in the National De­ fence portfolio. Brooke Claxton’s1 name is heard most frequently these days among the younger Ministers, but he, too, comes under heavy fire in Parliament. Nobody seems to know yet wheth­ er Louis St. Laurent will foe ia con­ testant, but with every day that passes the likelihood gets smaller'— he’s not a young man. J. L. Ilsley is in better health these days, since his staff finally persuaded him to take - Sundays off. ~ taken for granted that he wanted to life, that he would RH to make up if he were to change his mind. All this looks, to some observers, like a fairly clear field for Jimmy Gardiner. Many of them regard this as a very bad prospect for the Lib­ eral Party. A good deal of the talk you hear these days in favor of bringing Premier Stuart Garson to Ottawa from Manitoba, and giving him a Federal Cabinet post, is root­ ed in the hope that a popular West­ erner like Garson might be an ef­ fective rallying point for a “Stop Gardiner” campaign. But it’s been for so long now get out of public ihave lost ground last week where they visited Mrs. Hodgson’s brother, On return trip they will visit relatives in Detroit. Master Benny Harlton, of _ don, spent the week-end with his grandparents, Mh*. and Mrs. Albert Harlton. Mr, and Mrs, TJugo Theander, Mr, and 'Mrs. Borden Smyth and families, of London, were week­ end visitors with Mrs, Frank Smyth. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Mitchell, of London, were in the village on Sat­ urday, Mfr. Mitchell has accepted a position at the Airport. The station yard is a scene of activity these days with the harvest­ ing of the sugai* beet crop, Thanksgiving services will be held in the church on Sunday at 10.30 a.pi. and 7,30< p.m. Anniver- sai*y seryices will be held in the church on November 3rd, instead of October 20th, as formerly plan­ ned. These services will be an­ nounced at a future date, The Alert Mission Band will meet in the schoolroom of the church on Sunday, October 20 th, at the usual hour instead of -October 13th, be­ cause of the Thanksgiving services. Rev. and ,M'i’S. R. Merriam, of Putnam, were recent visitors with Mr. and ‘Mrs. G. F. Penwarden and other friends in the village. You are reminded of choir prac­ tise in ning at the churph on Friday 8 p.m. 0BOMWW Lon- eve- HARPLEY Donna Hayter is visitingMiss with friends in Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Max Disjardine and Alex visited on Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. John Ridley. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Wilton took their little boy to the hospit­ al on Saturday. He was suffering from blood poisoning in his hand. Mrs. Ross Guenther and Jean, of Exeter, are spending a few days with her mother, Mrs. Wm. Eagle- GLADMAN COCHRANE ■BARRISTERS — SOLICITORS EXETER, ONTARIO at Hensail, Friday 2 to .5 p.m. ELMER D, BELL, B.A. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR Successor to J. W. Morley EXETER, ONT, PR. F. J. MILNER PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Corner of William and Sanders * Streets, opposite the residence of the late Dr. J. W. Browning. Phones; Office 295W, Res. 295J EXETER, ONTARIO DR. R. H. DOYLE PHYSICIAN and X-Ray MAIN STREET, Telephone SURGEON EXETER 60 Dr. H. H. Cowen, L.D.S., D.D.S. DENTAL SURGEON Main Street, Exeter Office 3 6w Telephones Res. 3 6J Closed Wednesday Afternoons Dr. J. W. Corbett, D.D.S., L.D.S< DENTAL SURGEON BELL BUILDING, EXETER Telephone 273 C. E. ZURBRIGG Optometrist at Exeter ARTHUR WtBER LICENSED AUCTIONEER For Huron and Middlesex FARM SALES A SPECIALTY PRICES REASONABLE SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Phone 57-13 Dashwood R.R. No. 1, DASHWOOD (/LJL7//y// ////%^ i i I 1 > 9 t I ,1 9 r 9 t i Open every week day except Wednesday i f 80IIU $ $[WS ■K:; >:SJ SRY BOTTLERS . Upturn of Empties Urgently Needed Immediate Ketuin t ™-tace o£ bottles . • • I ‘ Right now there is a very ® this bottle shortage I plrtionlarly beverage to out do«n is made up irnme/f e^cragc6 you need and which come I -the production of the bever g y pca] to you to gather I bottle. I up your empty bottles Stort a bottle the empty bottles in Sort them out anil re ur room-yoT shed-yow- cellar- bo hel them at once, or call the regul V tbct up and i3 ’important . ■ • or tomorrow ot the tot. I return AM-empty bottles today * Hello Homemakers! When read of the feasting on Thanks­ giving Day years ago, we wonder how people could eat Moreover, in those days foods life.” dishes Our was certainly the The kinds of Canadian glass factories normally produce MILLIONS of bottles every month. The vital ingredient in bottle making is soda ash< Since July 12th the only big Canadian soda ash factory has been strike-bound. Since then the stock of soda ash has been used up ... bottle factories are closed down ... bottles are not being made today. Beverage bottlers and all producers of bottled liquids must have your bottles back to keep-^ping. Bottling plants will close down too ... if your empties are not returned. ® THE BREWING INDUSTRY (ONTARIO) so much, variety of “spice of unfamiliar are too numerous to mention. Thanksgiving menu ishould be limited to the foods necessary for our health and those foods which are plentiful—it should in­ clude very small portions of meat, butter and breadstuffs if we are going to enjoy ,a true Thanksgiving by conserving these foods for Eu­ rope. Here are some recipes that are simple to do, yet so different flavour. ROAST DUCKLING ORANGE SAUCE 1 4-1'b. duckling, 6 green apples, Vs ‘cup raisins, 2 cups stale bread crumbs, 1 tsp. salt, ■dash of pepper, tsp. poultry dressing, 2 tbsps. hot fat. Wipe, singe and clean the duck­ ling. Pare, core and dice the apples. Cover water, apples, dients duckling and sew u;p. Wrap the bird in heavy brown paper, oiled on the inside; leave the ends open so that the fat will flow into the pan. Place on a rack in a roasting .pan; roast uncovered and without water till tender. Cook 1 hr. '25 mins., at 325 degs. In the meantime 'peel an orange, scrape off and discard the white membrane, . cut the yellow peel in thin strips and cook in 1 cup of boiling water for 15 mins. Drain and discard the water. Remove all the membrane from the orange sections and break them into a pan. When the duck is tender, add the add the - . . V2 tsp. lemon juice and 2 tbsps. red jam of jelly. Simmer for 10 niins. pour over the duck and serve. BAKED CUCUMBERS 12 small cucumbers, 2 tbsps. flour, 1 cup milk, cup fine breadcrumbs, 2 tbsps. baking fat, % tsp. salt, U cup grated Canadian rika, <Peel the until tender serole. Melt salt and stir until bubblin^ ally add milk, stirring until smooth, thick and glossy. Turn the sauce over the cucumbers. Mix the cheese, crumbs and paprika and sprinkle over top Qf dish. Bake in an elec­ tric oven (350 degs.) about 25 to 30 mins, or until nicely browned. Serves 0. SCALLOPED (WBBAGE DE LUXE 2 tbsps, baking fat, 2 enriched flour, 1 can ■of mushroom soup, 1 eheppod onion, 1 tbsp, ped pepper, 1 tsp. chili ____ Vz cup niiilk, 1 head cabbage cut in wedges. Melt, fat; add flour; blend. Grad- in boilingthe raisins with drain, chop and add to the Add all remaining ingre- and blend well. Stuff the dripping to the orange, cooked peel, V2 tsp. salt. Cheese, cucumbers Place in fat, blend then tsp, pap- •and steam greased eas­ in floUr and g. Gradu- tbsps. cream tbsp, chop­ sauce, ually add soup and milk. Add on­ ion, pepper and sauce. Cook over low heat until smooth and thick, stirring constantly. Cook shredded cabbage in small amount boiling, salted water until just tender; if in wedges, 15 mins. Drain, add sauce. Mix lightly. Serves 4 to 6. MELON CUSTARD 3 eggs, % cup sugar, few grains salt, 2 cups milk, scald­ ed, Vz tsp. vanilla, melon cubes.* Beat eggs slightly; beat in sugar and salt. Pour .milk over egig >and sugar mixture. Return the custard to top of double boiler; stir over hot water until mixture fdrms a coatjng on a metal spoon. Pour immediately into a .bowl; ,add. van­ illa. When cool pour into serving dishes. Cover each portion with a layer of cubed melon. Top with whipped cream and serve. Serves 5. CHERRY TARTS (using a rolled oat pastry) 1 cup sugar, 2% tbsps. corn­ starch, % tsp. salt, 4 cups tart red cherries, % tsp-. salt, 1 cup­ flour, 1 cup rolled oats, 2/3 ■cup shortening, 3 or 4 tbsps. • water. Sift the tflou'r and salt jnto a cold bowl. Add the rolled oats -and blend in the fat. When the mixture ire-. FRANK TAYLOR IACENSED AUCTIONEER For Huron and Middlesex FARM SALES A SPECIALTY Prices Reasonable aud Satisfaction Guaranteed EXETER P.O. or RING 138 I ♦ A WM. H. SMITH AUCTIONEER and Middlesex assures you of your value on sale day ‘ 1 LICENSED For Huron Special training .property’s true Graduate of American Auction College Terms Reasonable and Satisfaction' Guaranteed Crediton P.O. or Phone 43-2 4 E. F. CORBETT LICENSED AUCTIONEER Terms Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. EXETER, R.R. 1 Phone Zurich 92r7 t sembles coarse crumbs', sprinkle the- USBORNE & HJjbBERT MUTUAL water ovei* the pastry to bind it together. Chill the dough thor­ oughly before rolling it. •Mix the flour, sugar, salt and cherries together. Line muffin tins with pastry. Fill with the cherry mixture. Bake 10 mins., in electric oven mins, ingue sired. at 45'0' degs. then bake 20' longer at 350 degs. ;Al mer- topping may be used if de­ Ji i * i I * * * THE QUESTION BOX Mrs. M. T. asks: the kettle in which tables fob canning? Answer:, Yes — vitamin value and boiling. Mrs. <T. Me. asks: the skins on canned spoilage? Answer: No, but to skin them. We might add, how­ ever, 1 when juice. Mrs with green the cause of green mould? Answer: The product has not been processed long ’enough or the jar.is not sealed airtight. A light growth of mould may be removed from the surface, the contents of the jar broug'ht to boiling point and used immediately. Mrs. CN T. asks I What can you do with home canned string beans which are too salty? Answer: Cook with potatoes or another vegetable. Add . sauce, omitting additional salt. 0 * * ik Anne Allan invites you to her %The Times-Advocate. Send in your suggestion on homemaking problems and watch this column for replies Should I cover I precook vege- helps to retain speeds up .the Would leaving tomatoes cause it is desirable that we do not skin tomatoes cooking them for tomato , G. B. asks: What will I do canned cherries that have mould bn .the top? What is ■a cream to Write FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Head Office, Exeter, Ontario Pres............... WM. A. HAMILTON R. R. 1, Cromarty Vice-Pres........... WM. H. COATES Exeter DIRECTORS Kirkton, R. 1 Mitchell R. 1 . Dublin, Ont. Kirkton, R. 1 I I JOHN HACKNEY .... : ANGUS SINCLAIR .... JOHN McGRATH ..... MILTON McCURDY .. AGENTS ALVIN L. HARRIS ......... Mitchell THOS, SCOTT ............. Cromarty THOS. G. BALLANTYNE: Woodham SECRETARY-TREASURER W. F. BEAVERS ........... ExeterB i i' * ■<* i 9 i i F. W. GLADMAN Solicitor, Exeter » i Highland Cedar FENCE POSTS ALL SIZES TO SUIT ANY . PURPOSE A. J. CLATWORTHY We Deliver Phone 12 Granton Classified Advertising pays in Results.—ethers have benefited by- it, why not you? r > I 1 » I a 1 I I f «