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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1955-08-18, Page 8THE TIMES -ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 184 1955 BRIDES -ELECT See the, '"reitaonallaed Service" AiIMMO at Times -Advocate none 770 Exeter Feminine Facts In A Page Devoted to the Interests of the Women Readers of The Times'Advocate* • ttatTiO4:0117001L. WITH CLOTHES LIKE -NEW! THREE CHEERS.FOR somirotif DRY MOUND! MO SIGN OF SPOTS.. • DIRT REMOVED! Mothers! Discover Now This Amazing Better Dry Cleaning Saves You Money! • Here, at last, is the perfect dry cleaning for children's clothes because it reaches deep into fabrics to flush out even the ugly, emi bedded grit and grime. No harsh dirt par - tides to wear out clothing fibers. No odors : even perspiration removed. Seiid them back to school brighter, cleaner, in clothes cleaned the miracle Sanitone way. Tried Our Laundry? You'll agree, once you send your first bundle, that our fast laundeteria service can't be beat. You'll like. how clean we get your clothes without damaging them. Save yourself hours of back -breaking work at surprisingly low cost. Brady Cleaners & LAUNDETERIA LTD. PHONE 136 EXETER Auxiliary Hears Temperance Talk Rev. Alex Rapson was •guest speaker at the August meeting of the Afternoon Auxiliary of James $t. United Churea .on Thursday afternoon, last. Mr. Ra,pson's address was on temperance and hia work in con- nection with the Polymer plant in Sarnia, The W;C.T.U, was in charge of the program. with Mrs. C. W. Down ,presiding, Mrs. Thos. Coates of Hensall contributed sa solo accompanied by Mrs. Wm. IE'ybus and 'Miss Marie Wildfang also sang with her raother. 1VIrs. Frank Wildfong, as accarailaniat 1'tiss Pearl Keyes' group ar- ra,zsged the program and Mrs. C. E. Zurbrigg presided for the thus- iness meeting. Mrs. Rhoda Shap - ton acted as secretary in the ab- sence of Mrs. Lloyd Taylor. - Odd Bits By B. A. Remedy For the sure-fire onion -woe we w.ould offer 'hearty thanks half - a -dozen times for every stew and meat leaf and five dozen times for each batch •of pickles every year and still :havethanks to spare. After a recent eye -watering session with a tew sieurids of tiny round ,monsters I had •alnioet de- cided to seek a less hazardous occupation. Every popular,,sug- gestion was tried. For A few cross-eyed minutes I cried around a turned out match stick which was clamped between my teeth. Then tame ,the dry bread relative Which ended, when, in a more smarting...moment I bit through the, thing. So it went through the „whole job. By supper time people began tip -toeing around •convinced that some crisis had come, about which I was too grief stricken to speak. For Who 'would ever think that such scarlet -rimmed eyes had any remote relation` to the lingering vinegar smell or a small raw of jars of 'pickles atsthe hack of the shelf. Well is was a erisis. One which brought forth the decision that either I find a substitute for ona Ione or a way to stop their tor - tura (before the season next year. if this pickling business is to con- tinue. Weather Signs • When: it's summer and we're speeding some time near woods and a lake we get to predieting weather by. •aotions of .creatures at nature. Around !these parts we !depend on biting flies, cicadas and grouchy children. When, the files bite, tails Is in the offing and when the cicadas sing, it's likely to fbeowarm and •clear and when the children are •grouthrit's hot, humid weather. • But on a day like Monday when the flies bit, the • cicadas sang and the children were irritable we had no alternative s but to waive the, natural signs and list- en to theweather foreeast ,on the radio to tell if it was a fit day for washing, It is estimated that for every Canadian employed in the min- ing industry, tour others are employed in -related or supply in- chistries. School Jackets And School Skirts 2.5()/o Off! NIEW SWEATERS .Pull-Fishtcirkeel Pure Botany Wool NEW BLOUSES imrng Daily • Clearance ,SALE Continues Save Up To. See The Big Specials On Our Dollar Table Summer Gloves 50c McKnight's 'L.adies.Wear PHONE 474 • iiiii WP44,A11$104 ll AllT11114411411411M44441141411M1.1411111111.4..11141141$110$11441111MlimmisIlltilmtmtlimpr, Gram Says; Its Nice To Be Back! By MARJORIE STEINER, To be told our recipe column has been missed from the wora- en's page of the Thnes-Advecete has given us a warm feeling' in the region of the heart. And to have been asked by •Vhe editor to write it again, at the request of a number of ladies, has made 'Gram' very happy, for ,she, too, has missed the triersdly contacts made through the exchange of recipes, So if you would 'like Ito vete for the continuance of this col- umn, we'd 'appreciate it if aou would vote, not iby ballot. but by a recipe (or two), gust after s We had resighed from the T -A staff, a Setter came to us from Miss Evelyn. Howard of Toronto, formerly of Exeter, which included it recipe and a household hint we'll he glad to pass along. (And if you have one, send it along with your reeipes, won't you?) "Pais pudding recipe is made with jello and will serve 6-7. GRAPENUT PUDDING • (Miss Evelyn Howard) 1 jello powder 2 ,cups hot water 1 scant cup sugar .., 1 cup graPenate 1 cup raisins • , Walnets prepare` any tlavor jello in the usual way. Stir in sugar while it is hot. Add -remaining ingred- ienti and pour into andulds to chill. To serve, unmold and seeps with bananas or seasonal fresh fruit and cream .or whipped ereatn. Household hint: tracked !dish- es can, be strengthened and made quite serviceable by boiling them In milk. Cover the affected part with milk, (bring to a, (boil, then allow to simmer for a, half hour. * * Mrs. Roy Webber has given us a cake recipe she used before he was 'married and .still does. It's easy to make and should be nice to serve with 'fresb fruit or ice scream, In •a restaurant lately we had a piece of light eake top- ped with a scoop of .vanilla lee cream and surrounded with 1211c - ed fresh •peaches. Delicious. 'SWEET CREAM SPONGli•tatHE (Mrs. Roy Webber) 2 eggs broken into a cup Fill cup with sweet 'cream Beat until light then add 1 cup granulated sugar lb cups flour (before sifting) 2 tsp. baking powder Pinch .af salt 1 tspavanilla or •other flavoring Bake in a square pan in mod- erate oven, • * * * * Now that tomatoes' -are ready for canning we want to give you a •recipe for eautney Wealth ,is delicious with .cold meat We've had this recipe for many years tea. It was given to us by the mother of a ell iend of our high school days. CHUTNEY • '8 lbs. tomatoes, t‘ b lb. garlic b lba green ginger 1 lb. raisins • 2 lbs. sugar . 2 tits. vinegar Chill pepper and salt to taste. Stew the tomatoes .until fairly MI*. Put garlic and ,glager [root through meat ,grinder and add With the •other bagredients. Cook until the mixture is as thick as -catsup. Seal in sterilized bottles. What YOU Should • ABOUT • CANCER (This is the second of four articles written especially for women by The Canadian Cancer Society. The series is presented ina eo-operation, with.the Exeter Ilait of the Society.) This le the "'Second •af four ar- ticles wri•tten, 'especially for wom- rtn by the Catiadiam Cancer Soc- dety. The series is presented in co-operation with the Exeter Unit of the Society. • Whet are the mast dangerous types of cancer in -women?, By what symptoms can women detect these growths and by what means oan they be treated? This was the tenor of one group' of questions asked of some 3000 Canadian women in a nation- wide survey conducted by the Canadian Cancer 'Society. And the survey* indicated an alarming lack of knowledge about the symptoms and nature of the dis ease -knowledge that could save: many lives. 'Phe 3000 women -‘ were selec- ted from all the provinces, from different age and income grbups, from highly industrialized areas and rural comniunities. The questionnaire was identical with one recently given in England by Dr. Ralston Patetson of the Holt Radium Institute dn Mim- chester Which revealed a start- ling ignorance of cancer among Erni:all women. The .Canadiall survey howed that Canadian women are iretter informed about: cancer ' than the :British women, 'Phis to accounted for by the fact that public •education aas not been a major part of the cancer fight' in Britain as it has in Cana.,daa The second group of questions an the quationalaire submitted to the Csitadian wometi was re- lated to specific knowledge of cancer of the breast and female genital treat. Most Serious Typee '11he0e are two of the Most ser - lona types of termer in welnen. Of the 8,945, WOMen Who died of 'cancer in 1953 (the last year fOrawlateh we have definite stalls - ties) 1,738 died trent cancer of the breast and 1,032 died from easter of the genital tract. At the same time (both of these are aeceiselible niter (camera that .en lbe detected from knowe symptosis and readily treated) and reepond comparativelywell to early treattheat by radiation (Sr surgery or 'both. The answers to the questions eh :calmer of :these eites indicate that i n All provinces, except Netv BrattsWiek and Quebee'80 % a the wellien. ,etinaidered lump in, the brettet as indicating a tarieer or it tumor of teethe kind. In 'Near Bruaiswiek ' 77% ,of the *omen were of (this 'opinion while in Quebec the proportion was only 59 %. In respect to cancer of the 'uterus, one-third of the i'etimen questioned did .not know the significanee of , Unnatural bleeding ten years after the meno- pause, although this is a .common syraptaitt o eancet. sThe Canadian survey showed that there is 210 significant dif- tetence in cancer iniforanation among women of different age gtotips. All Held Same OpiMon • Also; soeio-econsimie s a t u had little to do wibh cancer infer - medial. Participants were •selec- ted from three groups --wealthy, average and poor. The opinions .held 'by women in seaeh of .the groups were essentially the same as the over-all average. The English survey, en the other hand, revealed a 'considerable difference in the knowledge of calmer in the different eoolo- econeinie groups. „ Again the difference eat. acieei- aly be treated to the lay educa- tion programme 'carried ort in Canada. A cancer Sodiety official polated out that "One of the 'specific reasons for the founding of ,the Canadian Cancer . 'Society In 1988 as to inform our Cana- dian people about cancer. There were t s b 02 eurrquiidieg (the Sttbiebt of •eander • and people, were ,gehera0a poorly :Mites -mad about the dakeaSe. The medical aratessioa tonsidered it to be In the •pablic's interest to torin layanedidal aotiety to inform the aeOple !about the diSease. The reaults. of this survey dedicate that We have Moved back the of ignorance slightly, but *roe ts still a great deal to be done." . , In 1861 eoree the Wailes that were considered for the nevf Dos minion of Canada were Lauren. tie, blew Btitain, CabOtift, (Italians bia, Brittanica, Beretta, Mesope- lagia Doi's Beauty ShOppe (sous �t litek leweller) Natuieile rota/went 'Waving /mitre,' Odd Wave Dorothy C. MA Prop. i%otie /1.-W Sxttek. Friends Shower Donna Bowden' MM. Reg Hodgson and Mrs. Elmer Powe were joint hostesses for a miseellaneous shower in the schoolroom of the harch for Mies Ionia Bowden, 'bride -elect of this anciath. The a'oom was decorated in a scheme of plata and white with streamers itentred to a fancy um- brella. A short program oonsisting .of a reading by Mrs. •Alton Isaac a duet by Joyce alaralls and lira Ross MeFalls accompanied by bar. Nelson !Squills and a ehortis by the bride -elect's Sunday School class, the primary boys and girls, accoinperaed by Mrs. Alain Es - eery, 'Tile address was read by Mrs. Gerald ,Godboit, Arlene kInner and Helen Tas- ko •acted es the Ibrideselectse as- sistants. Marie Powe and Brian Lamport dressed as :bride and groom, introduced the gifts and caused ranch merriment., an a few well chosen words Donna thanked her 'friends tor the many 'beautiful gifts which she received. Zurich Church. .Scene Of Vows Pink •and White gladioli and candelabra decorated the main "altar of St. Boniface R.C. Church, Zurich, when Rosalie Marie Reg - ler !became the bride of Leonel-id Lindsay Jennings of Windsor. The bride is the daughter asf Mr. and aVIrs. Fred Regier of Zurich and the groom Is the son of Mr. and ,Mrs. F. C. Jennings of Sarnia. The Rev. Fr. M. D. Mairoghals spoke the nuptial vows . for the double -ring ceremony and Rev. Fr. Richard Bedard; cousin of the bride, efticiated. • • • • 1V1iss Helenne Farrell presided at the organ and accompanied the asoloiste Mrs. :Lorne Regier of Windsor and Miss Linda Bed- ard et 'Zarich. Escoated by her •father the bride -chase a floor length gown of Chantilly, lace and nylon tulle over dueliess satin. The snugly fitted lace isodice had a portrait neckline outlined by a nylon tulle. yokeaand long lilypaint sleeves. The billowing skirt was of nylon tulle over satin with :scrolls of 'Aleacon 'face cascading down the /twit- and back of skirt. Her (headdress, a Juliet tap of 'Chan- tilly lace and nylon tulle dotted with seed !pearls held a Stinger tip illusion veil. Her bouquet was of red. Amer- ican Beauty roses and white baby mums and tern with red reseamd tipped streamers. • a Mies Winnitred Regier, youag= est .sister of the baftlef•ae maid —Please turn to Page 9 ll l IRSokunsi0 ll iss lsla llll lllll mumiamoopi lllllll ll mum l lllllllllllllll lll l ll I lll sorogni , E. • • • The, Smart Hostess Uses sr. 'Personalized I • .Napkins + Informals + Coasters 4. Stationery Over 50 beautiful and novel styles of personalized napkins and ceasters are now available to you -at The Exeter Times -Advocate, Come in to see our new port- folio of "Personally Yours". Clever informals and thank - you notes—all reasonably priced and "PerSonally Yours'. f 1 11 5 5 5 5 1 The Times -Advocate • • • ...7.X.74.7.77:777, 47, • {..7.7, • 5 Exeter Pairy. . Phe 331J — Prompt Delivery .7. , . Chocolate Milk -- Butterinilk Cottage Cheese asher Regardless Of Age. Or Condition ON A NEW , N N Anniversary Model 80 WASHER Regular ,Price $209.50 Anniversary Trade -In Allowance $ 60.00 ou IPay. 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