Loading...
The Wingham Advance-Times, 1940-10-17, Page 14WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES A PIE THAT PLEASES CUTS COSTS* ;«1 Wife Preservers Hints On LEMON WITH FISH on i By RJ. SCOTT 1 % 6 12 1 1 be as “ « cups hot water teaspoon salt tablespoon sugar cup lemon juice Household Hints By MRS. MARY MORTON Today’s Menu Applesauce Cocoa For BETTER desserts t ,A Thursday, October 24, .1940 Corn' 3 WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Do your children come home to lunch? Sandwiches are filling and nourishing, and you can make them right after breakfast, wrap in waxed paper with a damp cloth over that, and they will be fresh and good for lunch. You can go peacefully on with your morning’s work, too, knowing that lunch will take but a moment to prepare. Sandwiches Chocolate Cup Cakes Sandwich Spread cup sugar z tbsp, dry mustard tbsps. flour pint green tomatoes sweet red peppers tbsps. salt . _ cup strong vinegar Mix sugar, mustard and flour toge­ ther. Sprinkle ground tomatoes and ’ -ground peppers with salt, stir well and let stand 15 minutes. Drain juice off, put tomatoes and peppers in por­ celain.kettle, add vinegar and let boil for 10 minutes, stirring constantly, then add dry mixture and cook until it thickens. Can hot. This makes 3 jjints and can be used as is, or with ground meat or eggs. Chocolate Cup Cakes cup granulated sugar cup butter large egg squares bitter chocolate cups cake flour tsp. soda 1 cup sour cream 1 tsp. vanilla Cream butter, add sugar gradually, creaming well with butter, then add melted chocolate. Sift flour with soda and add alternately with sour milk or cream; flavor last with vanilla. Fill cup cake pans % full, or it can be baked in square cake pan. Jelly Sandwiches Bread Butter Jelly Walnut meats Cut bread in % inch slices (white or whole wheat can be used) and re­ move crusts or not, as you please. Toast and cut in halves on the diag­ onal. Spread with butter and jelly (beaten until of consistency to spread evenly). Sprinkle % the pieces with nut meats, cover with remaining piece and serve hot. By Betty Barclay Here is a pie that pleases each member of the family as well as each guest who may be at your table, Easy to make, inexpensive, but very delic­ ious — what more may be asked of a pie? Raspberry Cream Pie cups (1 can) sweetened con­ densed milk cup lemon juice 1 cup raspberries % cup whipping cream 2 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar Vanilla Wafer Pie Crust or baked pastry shell Blend sweetened, condensed milk and lemon juice. Stir until mixture thickens. Fold in raspberries. Pour into baked pastry shell or pie plate (9-inch) lined with Vanilla Wafer Pie Crust. Cover with whipped cream sweetened with confectioners* sugar. Chill before serving. Vanilla Wafer Pie Crust Roll enough vanilla wafers to make % cup of crumbs. Cut enough vanilla wafers in halves to stand around edge of pie plate. Cover bottom of plate with crumbs and fill in spaces be- Don’t peel mushrooms because more of the flavor is in the skin3 than in the meaty part Mushrooms should be well washed before cooking, however. rou PAY LESS YOU USE LESS SURER RESULTS edges if desired. Combine ingredients, fill orange cups and arrange on let­ tuce-covered salad plates. Serve with mayonnaise, mixed with % juice. orange Jackson Dunkin. Grade X. CALUMET ORAND DOUBLE-ACTING BAKING POWDER Cool and add: " 1 cup of any cooked or canned'- fish, flaked 2 tablespoons chopped pimiento 1. cup chopped celery Chill .in individual molds. Unmold on crisp salad greens. With scissors cut fish-shaped garnishes from lem­ ons. . Accompany with Lemon Tar­ tare Sauce in lemon baskets. Serves 4-6. GIGANTISM AND ACROMEGALY CAN OFTEN BE PREVENTED Your child’s coughing at night- caused by throat "tickle” or ir­ ritation, mouth breathing, or a cold—can often be prevented by rubbinghis throat and chest with plenty of Vicks VapoRub at bed­ time. VapoRub’s swift poultice- and-vapor action loosens phlegm, relieves irritation, clears air pas­ sages, tends to stop mouth breath­ ing. This helps a a him relax into < E HI healing sleep. VvXJgJf It’s right to see red this autumn. Designers everywhere use red for day things, for evenings clothes, for form­ al and casual clothes. Guaranteed to brighten the dullest day is this bright red coat of soft woollen with a black velvet collar and incrustations above oversize pockets at the breast. The waistline is defined by double seam­ ing which dips down in a slight V in back and terminates in vertical seams in front. Flap pockets at hips. Eight velvet covered buttons. By Betty Barclay • Do you use lemon with fish? If not, you are failing to bring together two foods, that are ngted affinities. Lemon juice is alkaline in its reaction and tends to offset the acid reaction of the fish itself. Then again, the lemon fla­ vor is just as desirable on your sum­ mer fried or baked fish as it is your winter oysters. Baked Fish With Lemon Rub lemon juice over fish to baked, covering the inside as well outside. Salt and stuff or not als de­ sired. Put in well-greased pan, dot with butter, and bake at moderate temperature until done (about 12 minutes to the pound). Serve garn­ ished with parsley and lemon slices or quarters. • These should be large enough and plentiful enough to pro­ vide ample juice for flavor. Fish steaks may be baked in similar fash­ ion. Rub both sides of steak with the lemon juice. Broiled, or fried fish should .also be prepared by rubbing with lemon and served with lemon garnish. Fish in Lemon Aspic 2 itbsps. (2 envelopes) gelatine %. cup cold water Sprinkle gelatine on top of water. Add: 1% % i % Lemon Tartare Sauce cup lemon mayonnaise teaspoon onion juice or 1 tbsp, chopped chives 2 tablespoons chopped sweet pic­ kles or green relish Lemon juice Combine, thinning to desired con­ sistency with lemon juice. Serves 6-8. For Variation: Add chopped celery, capers, chili sauce, Worcestershire sauce, Angostura, or Tobasco. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Fruit Salad in Orange Cup§ (Serves 6) large oranges marshmallows, quartered cup diced pineapple cup banana slices (or other frut: pears, peaches, straw- "berries, cherries, white grapes) . Lettuce — Cut tops off oranges and remove pulp, leaving orange baskets. Flute Recently the newspapers featured the death, at**a comparatively early age, of a man who had attained the extraordinary height of several inches over eight feet. This was a case of gigantism or giantism which term is applied to anyone over 79 inches in height. Acromegaly is a name given to a condition where there is a great-in­ crease in the growth of the short and flat bones, the muscular and skin tis­ sues. Both are due to some disorder of the pituary gland situated at the base of the, brain. This gland, under normal conditionsi-controls the growth of the body. Under abnormal condi­ tions such as heredity, emotion, in­ jury or the present of a gland tumour, there may result excessive height and weight, overgrowth of the bones and tissuses such as are seen in gigantism and acromegaly. The pituitary gland is one of a con­ siderable group of the ductless glands including amongst others the supra renal capsule, the thymus, the thy­ roid and parathyroids, the pineal gland and carotids. All of these de­ velop an internal secretion which rea­ ches the blood by way of the yeins and lymph and is thus, distributed and ministers to the needs of parts of the body elsewhere. While ordinarily this secretion is of the higest usefulness, it happens that an excess may result in disease. This for example, an excess of thyriod se­ cretion causes toxic goitre; a similar excess from the suprarenal capsules will cause Addison’s disease and- from the Thymus an asthmatic disease of childhood. It is only in recent years that the function of this remarkable group has been recognized; it had long been a puzzle to physiological investigators. In many cases the interal secretion of the ductless glands i.s essential to life and the revomal of .the gland that forms it, leads to a condition of dis­ ease culminating in death. In other cafees the internal secretion is not es­ sential, or its place is taken by that" formed in similar glands in other parts of the body. The victims of gigantism do not live to a great age. This affection be-, gins in the period of adolescence be­ fore bony growth is completed at the age of 25. Acromegaly, on the other hand, does not show itself until the • thirties or forties. In treatment -of" these two conditions, x-ray, and the • injections into the veins of dessicated. gland substance have proven useful . and where a tumour of the gland is < the immediate cause, the tumour has been successfully removed. Excellence is never granted to man but as a reward of labor.—-Sir Joshua.. Reynolds. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ God is living, working still, All things work and tnove; Work, or lose the power to will, Lose the power to love.—Dwight. SALLY'S SALLIES- — SCOTTS SCRAP BOOK Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Established 1840. Risks taken on all classes of insur­ ance at reasonable rates. Head Office, Toronto, Ont. COSENS & BOOTH, Agents Wingham. DR. R. L. STEWART • PHYSICIAN ACROSS 1, Warp-yarn 4. To append 7. Pursue un­ relentingly 10. Masculine name 12. Enthusiasm 13. Kind of daisy 14. Egyptian god 15. Metallic rock 17. Eeast of burden 18. Region 20. Body off water 22, God of war, 25. Habit 26. Draw 28. Land measures 29. Dessert 30. Born 31. Queer old fellow 33. Ruin 34. Commotion 35. Piece of ' „ sculpture 86. Runs swiftly, as a brook 88. Masculine, pronoun 41. Body Of. water ’42. Resort\ •> Ascend ” ! 47. Palatable 40. Sharpens M A fulcrum ... pin BL Insect B2. Anumber '* DOWN, ' L King of, Israel «s hole in CF . > Undwelop^t 4. Region 5. Prohibi­ tionists 6. Colors 8. Negative reply 9. Comic 10. Cake of ' Indian meal 11. Hewing tool 16. Radium (Sym.) 18. Kettle 19. Before 20. Skin openings 21. Beginning 23. Spirit lamps1 24. Fragrance 25. Joker 26. Title of respect 27. An octopus 29. Reads 32. Energy (colloq.) » 33. Public vehicle 35. Explosion 37. Music note 38. A sunk-z fence 39. Metal 40. An herb 42. Blemish 43. Heap ' L T H] O U p A N 1 o G !3 l.l 5 E c H E S L O A T A S T E R E S T A 5 S 1 C H E C R O W E E V E Y S E R A B I.Y C R E A H 1 A L. T E R Ie ARE.-THE hARbEST SoPf PRIHKEW u * iH-filE s.WORLD & PENT 25o,ooo,oo<\OH. “VlXfr WATER Tths SUMMER./ Telephone 29 DR. W. M. CONNELL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 44. Arabian seaport 46. Selenium (sym.) 48. Exclamation Phone 19 JttetrtbaM tar Ktac jhMttW W. J 1 2 3 sy J //s 777 %5 6 7 B IO H 12 %13 H 15 16 17 IB 19 20 21 %22 23 2H 25 26 27 2©V*%30 « 31 32 33 3&? ■ 36 37 % 38 HO HI «/2 H3 HH 1/6 H7 H© 44 .... 50 W. A. CRAWFORD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Located at the office of the late . Dr. j. P. Kennedy* Phone 150 Wingham 1 W. BUSHFIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary,, Etc. Money To Loan. Office — Meyer Block, Wingham HARRY FRYFOGLE Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director Furniture and Funeral Service Ambulance Service. Phones: Day 109W. Night 109J.~~ X H. CRAWFORD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Bonds, Investments & Mortgages Wingham Ontario THOMAS FELLS AUCTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD A Thorough Knowledge of Farm Stock. Phone 231, Wingham. R. S. HETHERINGTON BARRISTER and SOLICITOR Office — Morton Block. Telephone 66 J. ALVIN FOX Licensed Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS THERAPY - RADIONIC ' EQUIPMENT Hours by Appointment. Phone 191 Wingham • Frederick A. Parker. OSTEOPATH Offices! Centre St., Wingham and Main St., Listowel. Lisiowel Days: Tuesdays and Fri­ days. Osteopathic and Electric Treat­ ments. Foot Technique. Phone 272 ‘ Wingham A. R. & F E. DUVAL CHIROPRACTORS CHIROPRACTIC and ELECTRO THERAPY North Street — .Wingham Telephone 300. MUGGS AND SKEETER By WALLY BISHOP