HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1953-07-30, Page 8Page 8
To make your summer
salmis attractive , , .
Salad Sets
NASTURTIUM PATTERN
$4.00
RIGHT-PIECE
PEBBLE GLASS SET
$3.00
Dot’s Beauty Shoppe
(South of Jack Smith Jeweller)
Naturelie Permanent Waving
Lustron Cold Wave
- Open Wednesday Afternoon -
Dorothy G. Pfaff, Prop
Phone 71 Exeter
SUPERTESI
THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 3Q, 1953
— By B.A. —
McCreery's Midsummer
*
Until August 8
Phone 109 Exeter
\ " " s
comments, lacking the
about the things that
obviously wrong to the
If you thought our prices were low before, come in a»d
see them now! We have reduced all our summer stock
to ‘
A Page Devoted to the Interests of the Women Readers of The Times-Advpc^te
CRYSTAL
$6.00
• To Comi>lete Your Sum
mer Costume Carry a
Basketware Handbag ....
$1.98
Hollow Tree
Gift
Huron Girls Plan
Achievement Day
August 19 has been set for
the South Huron Girls’ Home
Garden Club Achievement Day
program at Clinton District High
School. The North Huron Club
will hold their program the fol
lowing day, August 20, at Cran-
brook Community Centre.
Assisting Miss Jean Steckle,
Home Economist for the county,
will be Miss Doreen Kern, G. W.
Montgomery, agricultural repre
sentative and his assistant, H.
II. Baker. Eight South Huron
clubs and six in North Huron
are registered.
Records and certificates
achievement, county and
vincial honor certificates
pins will be awarded according
to work completed.
Silver spoons will be presented j
to members who have completed
the project satisfactorily. Each
member will exhibit her record
book, a dining room or living
room bouquet and a display of
vegetables. She will judge two
classes of vegetables and answer
a quiz on “Growing a Garden”.
Each club will have an exhibit
and will present a skit or de
monstration.
The program will begin at
9:30 am. and continue through
the day.
Club leaders in the district in
clude Mrs. Eldon Jarrott 'and
Mrs. WT. J. F. Bell, Kippen, Mrs.
Jackson Woods and Mrs. Harold
Hunter, Elimville, and Mrs.
Harry Dougall and Mrs. James
Kirkland, Hurondale.
ENJOY SUN — While folks inland were trying to escape the
torrid heat this week, these girls were enjoying it on the
beach. Kathryn Hunter, R.R, 3, Exeter, Florence Russell, of
Mitchell, and Barbara Hunter are the sunbathers. Like many
others from the district, these girls work in restaurants at
the resort. T-A Photo
Gram Says
Exeter, Mitchell,
Guelph Recipes
By MARJORIE STEINER
Convenience
. . . in choosing cards we have added another new dis
play cabinet, bringing space devoted to cards to 10 feet.
Come In and See Our Cards
Suitable for Every Occasion
The Choosa Book Shop
Clara Wellington Exeter, Ont.
See the Great New
Refrigerators
by INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER
Model L-105-0,10 du. ft./
tot frozen food* and Ice cream ... 13° for frozen deiserh
and quick chilling .,. 31° for keepins fresh mean fresh ...
37° for milk and general food storage^ .. 46° humid Cold
for ffeih fruit* and vegetables... 39° lot eggs, condiments,
bottled beverage*..» 55° lot keeping butter easy to sptead.
• (TeMperotutei) shown ate for average condition*)
It takes 1 different areas of
colcl-from 6° to 55*—to keep
basic foods in prime condi
tion. You get all 7 of these
essential “food climates”—all
working at oiice-irt the new
IH Refrigerators.
Come in ahd see how they
can help you feed your fam
ily better—get more out of
your grocery money, tod.
• Niw Futh»hu«on automatic 4«frdttlna
• Beautiful Sprltia-Fruah Green Interior*
• Bl* Full-width freezer*
• Rantry-Dor with extra *h«lv«»
• Giant Crlfperi, deep andl roomy
• Famed* "Ilaht-Wdd”* unft with S-year
warranty
LOW DOWN PAYMENT
EASY TERMS!
F• W. Huxtable
PHONE 153-W EXETER
This week we have Mrs. Lex
McDonald’s recipe for cottage
cheese salad to pass on to you.
We sampled it at a picnic and it
was so good we asked if we
might have the recipe. The will
ingness with which our requests
are granted, makes the prepara
tion of this column a pleasure.
Cottage Cheese Salad
(Verna McDonald)
lime jello
cup hot water
cup pineapple juice
cup cottage cheese
cup whipping cream
Method: dissolve jello
hot water and pineapple juice.
When set whip with beater. Add
cottage cheese and cream which
has been whipped. Beat all to
gether and let set.
Miss Eva Penrose, of Mitchell,
called at the T-A office recently.
She promised us a recipe which
arrived by mail. It is for Banana
Cake and differs from any
similar recipe with the addition
of spice.
1
1
%
1
%
with
Banana Cake
(Miss Eva Penrose)
% cup butter (or margarine)
Shower And Tea
Honor Bride-Elect
Miss Joan Hopper, Miss Jean
Taylor and Mrs. Charles Cowen
were co-hostesses at a surprise
miscellaneous shower for Miss
Jean McDonald, August bride-to-
be, on the lawn at Miss Hopper’s
home on Albert Street.
Jean was seated in a decorated
chair covered with a large um
brella from which colored stream
ers were suspended. The gifts
were presented to her in decorat
ed baskets. An address was read
by Joan Hopper.
On Wednesday afternoon and
evening, Mrs. Lex McDonald en
tertained at a trousseau tea in
honor of her daughter, Jean,
whose marriage to Hugh Parsons
will take place August 1.
The many guests were received
by Mrs. McDonald, Jean and Mrs.
Frank Parsons. Mrs. Ray Mc
Carter and Mrs. Howard Holtz
man attended the door.
In the afternoon Ruby Parsons
displayed the gifts while Muriel
Coward, Jean Taylor and Aldine
Pym showed the trousseau. In
the evening, Mrs. Bob Pryde dis
played the .gifts and Mrs. Charles
Cowen, Mrs,
Miss Helen
trousseau.
Assisting
which was t
With lace cloth, silver candelabra,
with pink
of roses
Miss Olive
Gallimore,
the bride-to-be, Mrs. Delbert Ma
lott, Kingsville, and Mrs. Earl
Dawson, of West Lome, Misses
Helen Westcott and Elsie Morley
assisted in the dining room in
the afternoon.
Pouring tea in the evening
Were Mrs. William Passmore,
Mrs. W. G. Simmons, Mrs. Lloyd
Parsons and Mrs. Merle McDon
ald, Windsor, while Mrs. Bat
Hearn and Miss Joan Parsons as
sisted in the dining room.
Don Parsons and
Parsons showed the
at the tea table,
attractively arranged
tapers and centrepiece
and carnations, were
Parsons, Mrs. William
London, and aunts of
Service with Courtesy
Exeter Cab
Supertest Station
PHONE 405
HAY Oil NXGztT
1
2
4
3
1
melted
cup granulated sugar
eggs, beaten
tbsps. sour milk or cream
bananas, mashed
scant tsp. baking soda (dis
solved in 'a little hot water.)
cups sil'ted flour
tsps, baking powder
tsp. salt
tsp. vanilla
tsp. cinnamon or nutmeg
and
Add
and
and
2
2
Vs
1
1
Method: Sift flour, salt
spice into a large bowl,
melted butter, sugar, eggs
sour milk. Mix thoroughly
add. baking soda and mashed
bananas. Bake in moderate oven
30 minutes.
While visiting Dr. and Mrs.
Roy Campbell, Guelph, formerly
of Hensail, we enjoyed delicious
butter tarts, the nice juicy kind,
and came home with the recipe
safely tucked in our purse.
Rich Butter Tarts
(Mrs. A. R, Campbell)
cup brown sugar
cup corn syrup (scant)
eggs, beaten
dessertspoon vinegar
tsp.
cup
oz.
cup
rants)
Line tart pans with
pastry, fill % full. Bake
moderate oven. Makes 1 dozen
large or 2 dozen small tarts.
Speaking of tarts, one of our
readers reported trying Mrs. D.
Kyle’s De 1 i c i o u s tart recipe
printed recently and says
were really delicious. Her
band remarked on how
they were too. We like to
you’re using the recipes.
1
1
2
1
1
%
1
%
vanilla
walnuts, broken
butter
seedless raisins (or cur-
rich
in
they
h us-
good
hear
A Night Out
Luck and a kind baby sitter
saw us on a night out last week
and witnesses to the intrigues of
Richard III at the Shakespearean
Festival, Stratford.
Nor was it a disappointment
to my unseasoned ears. From
the first trumpet calling us to
our seats to the gay smile of Mr,
Guinness as he bowed out his
last curtain it was an experience
set far apart from everyday
things.
If it did take a few minutes to
catch up with file tumbling, un
familiar lines, the illusion was
not disturbed throughout the
performance once the atmosphere
was established to this mind, far
removed from the dusty school
volumes of Shakespeare’s plays.
And
few
the
first
Apart from the play was the
large s p r i n k 1 i n g of ‘theatre
characters’ among the audience.
Strange and accented fashions of
the day showed themselves
among the ladies and the men
wore everything from tails to
hawaiian sports shirts.
Eavesdropping, we heard what
was wrong with the setting and
how the actors should have done
this or that and we imagined all
sorts of famous people into the
maze of faces that we saw. (It
was a bit disillusioning because
for some reason we had expected
to be sitting among the masks
and flounces of the Victorian
era.)
Now we’ve caught up on the
press notices and magazine
criticisms of the plays. We can
only agree with the favourable
know-all
were so
critics.
And not knowing these things
we feel that the experience
would be worth anyone’s budget
pinching for a seat behind a pole
—if for the color and the engag
ing mood of the thing alone.
* * * *
it seemed to be rather a
minutes than an hour from
play’s beginning until the
intermission was upon us.
Obit
She watched her calories —
drank a quart of milk a day and
never tea or coffee. She always
carried an umbrella and sneezed
into a hanky, never talked on
the phone during a thunder
storm, kept away from people
with colds and mumps, rheuma
tism and ragweed in their gar
dens, always locked her doors’at
night and slept at least eight
hours with a loaded revolver
under her pillow.
She died last Saturday in her
early thirties and is survived by
an overflowing medicine cabinet,
a sad watch dog and a worn-out
doctor.—She tried to drive to
town in the middle of the road.
BE A LADY DRIVER.
IIlowest possible prices.
DRESSES ..... ..............
Also a few as low as
BLOUSES AND SKIRTS .... reduced 33%%
• Be sure and see our Table of Assorted Articles to
•clear at ..................... 25f!
•> The lucky ticket on the blanket will be drawn at: the
close of the sale, Saturday, August 8.
GENUINE - GUARANTEED
EASY
Washers
$14950
COMPLETE WITH PUMP
Regular $199.50
Save $50.00
Genuine Guaranteed Easy Washers
$110
Summer Special
Washer
nee
LlMlTlED QUANTITY NOW AT Model 43
s,
A RE
Mrs. H. Elworthy
Born In Colborne
Mrs. Violet B. Elworthy, widow
of Richard Henry (I-Iarry) El
worthy died at her home Saturday.
She was stricken with a serious
illness the previous Sunday from
which she failed to rally.
The former Violet B. Crews,
she was born in Colborne Town
ship, coming to Exeter as a child
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Crews.
Following their marriage, Mr.
and Mrs. Elworthy farmed in
Usborne Township. Upon retir
ing, they moved to Exeter in
1928. Mr. Elworthy died in 1931.
Mrs. Elworthy was a member
of James St, United Church.
She is survived by three
daughters, May, Mrs. Orby Kestle
and Reta, Mrs. Jack Springer,
both of Detroit, and Mary, at
home; one grandson, Richard
Springer; two brothers, Forest
Crews, Toronto, and Waldron, of
Suffield, Alta; and a sister, Mrs.
Helen Armstrong, Exeter.
The body rested at the Hopper-
Hockey funeral home until Mon
day when the Rev. H. J. Snell
conducted the funeral service.
Interment was in Exeter cemetery.
Acting as pallbearers were
Charles Godbolt, Gilbert Dow,
Frank Taylor, Ed. Westcott, B.
M. Francis and Clarke Fisher.
•Sg^BUYS-WHYS
& WEEKLY INFORMATION SERVICE
MONTREAL—Did you know that there’s wonder
ful relief from painful corns . . . right at your
nearest drug counter? I mean BLUE-JAY Corn
Plasters with Phenylium. Phenylium is the first
really new medication for coms and calluses in
over seventy years! In actual tests, it went to
work 33% faster and worked 35% more surely than
other leading remedies. You see, Phenylium gets
right down under your corn and helps push it out
from underneath. Easy to see why folks with problem feet say it’s the
best news in years! So cheer up . . , pay a visit to your favourite
drug counter today and “invest” in foot comfort . . . ask for Blue-Jays
with Phenylium.
When You’ve Used time and
money on doing
down fruits in the
summer, you don’t
want to take
chances on fail
ures, do you? It’s
the pectin content
of fruit z that is
very often the dif-
ference. Some
fruits are very low
in pectin. But with CERTO
FRUIT PECTIN, you can do
down any fruit, beautifully. Certo
is natural fruit pectin in Concen
trated form. It supplies needed
pectin to make fruits jell properly.
With Certo you need only a one-
minute full rolling boil. So it
takes only 1/3 the time of the
former long-boil method. You get
up to 50% more jam or jelly from
the same amount of fruit. There
are wonderful recipes in the book
let, found under the label of each
bottle of Certo.
Some Evening Soon, when the dishes are done and the children are
in bed, get out your bank book and count up your >
savings for the past twelve months. Have you
been, helping yoursclj generously enough from each (Co
month’s pay-ciioque ,,»■ ’ /our savings almost
noh-oxistent? Perhaps all gone to the
butcher, the baker and t Io hat shop around
the corner.. This isn’t fait to you. You should have
money to show for last year’s work. So why not
promise, yourself that thin year’s Work is going to
pay off in a neat little nest-egg in ft Savings Account at the BANK
OF MONTREAL, Open yours tomorrow at your Nearest branch of ...
the BofM.
Traquair’s
Model 88P
Get Savings & Quality Too!
Regular $139,50
This h The Label to remember
for the best
salads you’ve
eVer tasted.
Yes, that’s
something I
learned long
ago. There’s no
sense in using
fresh vegetables
and fruits for
the finest of
your salads * *. then spoiling them
with inferior salad dressing. That’s
why I look for the MIRACLE
WHIP label When I’m looking for
something to make my salads
extra-tasty. Miracle Whip Salad
Dressing is the only dressing I’ve
found that combines the lively
flavour of boiled dressing with the
smoothness' of mayonnaise. It’s
truly unique. Sd ask your grocer
for the “one and only” Miracle
Whip->-made by Kraft.
KRAFT
QUfiL/TV AT FAIR ■PR/CFS>
PHONE 27 EX