The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1950-04-06, Page 14THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 6, 1950
ififi "w"" 1 w i ii »■ innwu
We Have in Stock:
1x5 and 1x6 Matched
Also
1 x 4 - 5 -% - 8 - 10
and 12 inches
Dressed 4 sides
A. J. Clatworthy
PHONE 12 GRANTON
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a—........................... —if
H
CKOS S
T
BUNS
Delivered
Good Friday Morning
Brock’s Bakery
Phone 8 Exeter
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INSURANCEW <•■ v’ W ■ W
CEMENT
BLOCKS
Immediate Delivery
HURON CONCRETE
PRODUCTS
Phone 084 Seaforth
AUTOMOBILE
Lumbermens Mutual
Casualty Co.
“World’s Greatest Automobile
Mutual’’
FIRE
Mill Owner’s Mutual Fire
Insurance Co.
CASUALTY
Massie and Renwick Ltd.
Liability — Plate Glass
' HOSPITALIZATION
Mutual Benefit Health and
Accident Association
“The largest company of its
kind in the world’’
20 Used Cars
For Sale
1950 DODGE Sedan.
1949 -CHEV Coach.
1947 PLYMOUTH Club Coupe.
1947 FORD Sedan.
1947 PLYMOUTH Sedan.
1949 FORD Sedan.
19 46 CHEV Coach.
1939 HUDSON Sedan.
1939 PLMOUTH Coach.
1938 CHEV Coach.
1937 CHEV Coaches (2).
19 38 FORD Sedan.
193 6 DODGE Coupe.
19 38 FORD Coach ........... §275.
1934 CHEV Coaches (2).
1945 PANEL FARGO.
1933 DODGE Sedan.
1933 Half-Ton Pick-Up FORD.
193-7 2-Ton Truck FORD - §225.
1928, 19 29 FORD A Coaches (3)
’29 CHEV Sedan, good tires $50.
Ward Fritz
Phone 78 Zurich
STYLE AND
PERFORMANCE
LEADER
FROM ANY ANGLE
THE NEW
1950
WITH "TIP-TOE" SHIFT
BLYTH MAN INVENTS TURNIP PLANT SPACER — Pictured above are (front row):
Walter McBride, Exeter; Allan Richard,
Woodham; Tom Yellow, Exeter; Harold
Exeter; and James Hodgert, Woodham.
Dougherty which will plant one acre of
usual two and a half pounds. The sower
the ratio of the pulleys used to operate
It was on display in Exeter Thursday.
Exeter; Russell Dougherty, Blyth; Roy Cottle, of
Dignan, Hensall; (back row): L. V. Hogarth, of
The group surrounds a machine invented by Mr.
turnips from one pound of seed instead of the
will space seeds at any distance depending on
it,, thus doing away with thinning out of plants.
(Cut through courtesy of London Free Press)
Ernest 0. Harvey
Insurance Agency
Phone 47 Exeter
Butter Makes It Better
I
"LETS YOU DRIVE
WITHOUT SHIFTING "
Hensall Motor Sales
mean
Easter Driving
Care Urged
Ten days’ holidays can
ten days’ hazard for children on
£he streets and the highways,
Hon. George H. Doucett, -Ontario
■Minister of Highways, points out
in a special pre-Easter statement.
He urges all who drive to watch
constantly for children on the
streets and highways.
“Remember the Easter holi
days of your own childhood,”
the Minister suggests, “with the
freedom from regular schoolday
routine from homework, and
with all the fun of several days
of carefree play. Today’s child
ren, feeling the srtme, /have to
face the dangers of greatly in
creased motoi’ traffic. And all of
us use our cars more and more
as winter relaxes its grip."
Mr.
every
keep
mind
tragic
dents to children can be avoided.
“I know of no person," he says,
“who could erase from his mem
ory the picture of a child he
had maimed or killed. Looking
back he realizes
dent might have
by just a little
little more care.’
During 19*49,
accidents killed
and injured many of them per
manently—nearly 3,000. Com
pared with 1941, however, child
ren playing in the street figured
in fewer accidents, a fact that
should give encouragement to
Doucett believes that if
person who drives will
safety uppermost in his
in the next few days, a
upswing in traffic acci-
been
and
pro-
tli an
For centuries' the incompar
able . flavoui’ of butter has ap
pealed to people througout the
world. In Canada., the making of
butter in the home was a part
of pioneer life. The commercial
manufacture of butter has
established for many years
produces a more uniform
duct. Today we have more
a thousand creameries producing
about three hundred million
pounds of butter each year. ,
Rationing of butter during the I mind
war years taught us to spread'
the bread a little more thinly
and to do without that .delicious
little pat of butter in the baked
potato or on other cooked vege
tables. Habits are .easily formed,
whether good or bad, but many
of us are still foregoing a flav
our treat as well as ,a good nu
tritional investment by continu
ing the habit of going easy on
the butter.
No matter how good butter
may be when purchased, care
must be taken to retain its sweet
flavour. Butter should always be
stored in a cool, dry place, away
from all foods which have a dis-
tinct odour or flavour, as it
readily absorbs foreign flavours.
It ■ should be kept in a covered
container or
the parchment
is purchased.
Buttei' is so
ourful that it makes an excellent
spread for bread or toast and it
adds extra .goodness .to cookies, 1 cakes, desserts, sauces and can
dies. The names “Butterscotch”
- or “Buttercrisp", where used in
I any of these products bring ,to
*1 mouth - watering suggest-
i ions and flavour and texture.
Nothing beats a topping of
crunchy buttered crumbs on a
casserole dish. Often such a top
ping makes the family forget
that they are eating leftovers.
Another idea for topping is
•used on biscuits. Use your fav
ourite recipe for baking powder
biscuits but substitute % cup
cornmeal for % cup of the flour.
When the dough is rolled and
cut, dip the tops of the biscuits
in melted butter, then in .corn
meal.
oven,
buter and maple .syrup, .honey or
jam.
well wrapped in
paper in which it
smooth and flav-
Bake as usual in a hot
400 °F., and serve with
THE SUGAR
BEET INDUSTR?
The" effect of lime on the
“juice" is both chemical and
is a most important operation in
beet sugar factories. 'Following
two lime treatments the juice is
subjected to' a third filtration
after treatment with sulphur
fumes, thus reducing the alkalin
ity caused by lime and also re
moving aditional non-sugar im
purities. The juice is now a beau
tifully clear liquid, -almost water
white, but quite thin.
Next step is to’ remove .excess
water from the juice before it
can be crystalized. This is done
in immense evaporators arrang
ed in series of five. Exhaust
steam is used in the first one,
vapour from • which goes to the
second one, and so o*n until the
juice has emerged from the last
one, much thickened. It is then
given another filtration, the
final step in purifying it. The
“thick juice" is now ready (for
formation, of the grain, that is,
crystallization.
Next issue: Extracting Sugar,
(Continued)
CANADA AND DOMINION
SUGAR CO. LIMITED
Wallaceburg
H
>>
i
!
that the acci-
•been avoided
less speed, a
motoi’ vehicle
125 children
Chatham
Easter
those who strive to make child
ren more safety minded: teach
ers, police, newspapers, radio,
service clubs, parents and others.
“But in the last analysis,
everyone who drives must recog
nize his individual responsibility
for accidents. Driving is a privil
ege; a privilege which is being
withdrawn from several hundred
drivers every week because they
fail to use it safely.Choose from 500 Suits in Stock
Colours of Brown, Grey, Slate
Blues, Bermuda Cords 4
Cloths —- Pic & Pics, English
Worsteds, Gabardines
«Styles •—- Double- and s ingle -
Breasted Tails, Shorts and Regu
lars and of course the New Eng
lish Concave Shoulder which is
neither Drape nor Lounge but
something very new.
• Get your Suit and Adam Hat
and Coat now. It will be
pressed ready for you Sunday
Makes of
Towne Halle, Warren K. Coolc
Gab, Suits, S-pr. pants * $49.00
Gab. Topcoats - $20.00 and up
X.
k <S W$3 \ i A" ’
Our Easy Term Budget Plan Is for Your Convenience
SHUCKS, FOLKS, >TWERN’T NOTHIN’ — Bored to tears
bv the monotony of layitig eggs that are always the same
size, Emile, a Plymouth Rock, of Elmont, New York, admires
her latest creation—an oversized egg weighing a half pound.
The egg at right is also hers but at the moment she does
not care to admit it. — Central- Press Canadian
Our stocks are larger than most city stores .and our
lines arc all well known brands—and you can’t beat
our prices!