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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1940-12-05, Page 6
WINGHAM ADVANCE TIMES m’ For BETTER desserts DURHAM £>30 ‘ S A IF i I Hints On 3 tsps, salt tsp. pepper tbsps. fat cup chili sauce cup water tsp. Worcestershire sauce onions, sliced green pepper, diced small potatoes carrots Brown garlic in fat, add salt, pepper. Remove garlic and brown meat on all sides in fat. Add water, Worcestershire and chili sauces, cov er tightly and simmer gently, turning roast occasionally, adding more water if necessary, a little at a time. One- half hour before the meat is done, add onions, green peppers, potatoes and carrots. It will take about 316 hours ■to cook a roast this size. Make gravy •by thickening liquid with flour mixed smooth in water. Black Walnut or Butternut Spice Cake 1 cup black walnuts or butter nuts, broken cup butter or fat cups brown sugar eggs, separated cups sifted flour cup milk tbsp, baking powder tsp. salt tsp. cinnamon tsp. nutmeg tsp. ground cloves broken nut meats in boiling for five minutes and drain. Closely cover and cook 10 .minutes. Remove cover, Add -sugar -and butter. Cook 5 minutes uncovered. Do .not stir. Serve cold. Apple Rice 16 cup rice 2 cups milk 6 apples 1 cup brown sugar Cook rice in milk in double boiler 16 hour. Pare and core apples and ar range in baking dish. FilJ re titres with brown sugar. Put rice around .apples, Sprinkle remaining sugar ov er top. Cover and bake until apples are tender. Uncover and bake 10 min utes. Serve hot with ice cream. .Friars' Omelette apples tbsp, butter’ tbsp, bread crumbs eggs tbsp, sugar and 6 4 4 2 4 ■Rare, slice and cook apples smooth apple sauce. Add sugar and cool. Beat egg yolks light and add to apple sauce, beating well. Beat egg whites until very stiff. Fold into oth er mixture. Melt butter. Add crumbs and blend well. / Sprinkle 16 crumbs in bottom of casserole, mixture, crumbs over top. Bake % hour in a slow oven at 275° F. Serve at once. Add apple Sprinkle remainder of COFFEE AND WAFFLES STAR PERFORMERS AT BREAKFAST There’s old-fashioned charm about some of the newest fashions in afternoon and evening-frocks. Sketch ed is a very smart frock with the old- fashioned basque-type bodice that out lines every curve of the figure. .The draping from two oblique seams above the bust softens the plain, round neck; The gathered peplum, which is set on to a V shape, minimizes the waistline. Tlte skirtj which is slightly flared, has a centra seam, 1 ------------------ £ '■.- •3 s water Cream fat, add sugar a little at a time and cream thoroughly, add well-beat en egg yolks. Sift dry ingredients to gether and add them to first mixture, then add nuts. Fold in well-beaten egg whites last. Bake either in greas ed muffin tins or in layer-cake pans in 350 degree Qvgp for about 20 min utes or until lightly bfOWned. TESTED RECIPES ■Apples The appple is a favorite at meals; cheap, healthful and economic al; available at all seasons, but partic ularly good now. The following recipes are recom mended by the Consumer Service of the Dominion Department of Agricul tures I pr. Honey Apples -r </, i . 5 1 % X? .Jew. all = I I Household Hints By MRS. MARY MORTON £ a > if mm mu iiiiim III3IHI111 ii t ii i i ii miti•ait hi • ii mu i«m tiHrth A well cooked pot roast is a dish that is a perennial favorite with the men in your life and also quite inex pensive. I am giving you the recipe of a slight variation of the usual roast. pot Today's Menu Spanish Pot Roast Moulded Tomato Salad Black Walnut or Butternut Spice Cake Coffee or Tea Spanish Pot Roast 4 lbs. beef rump or chuck 1 clove garlice apples tbsp, butter cup honey cup water 1 ’ * Melt butter. Add tidfigy and water. Boil 5 minutes. Pare, core and cut ap ples in eighths. Add to syrup. Cover. Cook slowly without stirring ten min utes. Cool before removing from pan. Chill before serving. Braised Apples Vz cup sugar 2 tbsp, butter 6 apples Pare, core and cut apples in one- inch cubes. Put apples in casserole. By Betty Barclay Whether you are planning a family breakfast or dispensing early morning hospitality to your friends after a par ty, coffee and waffles are savory af finities that can be depended on to delight the morning appetities. Efficient irons make waffles fool proof delicacies nowadays; and maple syrup, honey or brown sugar and cin namon blended with melted butter transforms them into irresistable treats. If you want a more substantial breakfast, add a fluffy omelet. Even the most amateur cook can master the secret of coffee success. Just keep the apparatus absolutely •clean, measure the quantity of coffee and water exactly and time the brew ing directions to the second. When you make decaffeinated coffee in a percolator or plain coffee pot, a little longer time is allowed to bring out the coffee’s rich, fragrant flavor. There’s a new drip grind in decaffein ated coffee that’s a special favorite with gourmets who like to enjoy extra cups, .no matter what the time of day * ’ 1 COAq opening cannoir Jpitt CALUMET 00AXO DOUBLE-ACTING BAKING POWDER especially to those who had thought there is no limit to their ability. Life teaches us that we soon reach the end of the short road of ’'the possible”, and then the impossible looms before us. It is possible to restrain a man from crime; it is impossible to restrain him from'sin. It is possible to com pel a man to pay his taxes; it is im possible to compel him to be generous? It is possible to readjust a man’s cir cumstances, but we can not renew a man's heart. We may educate, we cannot regenerate. We can refurnish a person’s mind; we cannot give that person the mind of Christ. We may give a man good manners; we cannot make him good. We may save one from worldly excesses; we cannot make that one immune from the world’s contagion. We may “patch up a bad job” but we have no power of new creation. We soon contact our "impossibles” and they stare upon us from every side. But the things which are im possible with men are possible with God, and it is’only in God'jind in the power of His holy grace that the possible becomes possible. In Lord Jesus miracles may happen cry day, they are happening every day. In our pathetic folly we go on trying to mend broken earthenware, when the mighty God would recreate the vessel. We rely upon the ministry of good fellowship when we can do nothing without the communion of the Holy Ghost. We use social cosmetics upon a withered and wizened society, and the Holy Lord is waiting with the unspeakable quickening of Birth. wtice the years between 1930 and 1987 were lean years; there was not the volume of grain that there was in 1988 and 1989. Additional to grain is the freightage of coal, gasoline coming in, some interior accumula tions of products outward” bound, all of which is water-moved tonnage. A careful computation of the revenue to the Canadian railways and Depart ment of National Revenue, shows that the eleven-year period at Goderich produced revenue as follows: Canadian National Rail- ’ ways ......................... Canadian Pacific Rail’ way ............................ Customs revenue—coal grain passed on last year, 1939, the only record available ...... $4,900,Q0Q 4,400,000 874,279 i ra the ev- the New E. G. GAVEHURON MEMBER HIS MAIDEN SPEECH % % 1 4 teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper cup milk tablespoon butter egg yolks beaten until thick and lemon-colored egg whites, stiffly beaten ground grind) or night, Boiled Coffee (Cleared with Egg) Use 1 heaping tablespoon decaffeinated coffee (regular and 1 teaspoon beaten egg for each cup (16 pint) cold water. Combine coffee and egg in pot and mix thor oughly. Pour in water and bring slow ly to boh, stiffing coffee down Occas ionally. Remove from fire immediate ly and let stand in warm place 3 to 5 minutes. Pour 14 cup cold water into pot to settle. Strain from the grounds through a fine wire strainer, muslin or may also egg.) 4 Combine quick cooking tapioca, salt, pepper and milk in top of double boiler. Place over rapidly boiling wat er and cook 8 to 10 minutes after wat er boils again, stirring frequently. Add butter. Cool slightly while beat ing eggs. Add whites. Turn into hot, buttered 10-inch frying pan. Cook ov er low flame 3 minutes. Then bake in moderate oven (350° F.) 15 minutes. Omelet is sufficiently cooked when a knife inserted comes out clean. Cut across at right angles to handle of pan, being careful not to cut all the way through. Fold carefully from handle to opposite side and serve on hot platter. Garnish with parsley and serve with crisp bacon, (Continued from Page Three) following quantities of grain have pas sed through our elevators from 1929 to 1939. I do’not wish to take the time of the house to read but I have a copy, and I may be put on Hansard; Year 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 To this must be added an approxi mate 2,500,000 bushels per year which is received by the Western Canada Flour Mills in Goderich. You will the figures, ask that it X Bushels 8,891,486 6,388,875 7,526,388 4,346,086 6,919,283 5,985,025 5.805.585 7,539,130 4.883.586 10,673,841 10,881,490 Total revenue ...........$10,174,279 Thus you will appreciate that the dependable revenue afforded through our ports warrants requisite attention to developments, maintenance and .safeguarding of the facilities which will provide safe and prompt access to Goderich harbour for any fully- loaded steamer under all weather con ditions. I trust the minister will give these imperative requirements merit ed attention. There are many 'thousands of Can adian women who, although outside the public eye, perform vital war duties in their homes, maintaining the health of the rising generation and assisting Canada’s internal economy in their daily purchases, devoting their spare time to the corporate Work of groups and organizations. I be lieve we have come to the time wihen these women’s groups will have to be initiated into industry, and in my opinion the sooner the • better. .It might save considerable confusion if the time ever came when a good many of our industrialists were taken away from their jobs and sent overseas. I would like to conclude my re marks with an extract from a speech I made during the course of the elec tion campaign, as follows: Our primary duty ar farmers is to the empire. Our brother agriculturists in Great Britain-” are desperately fighting for freedom’s cause. They have left their fields and farms to be tended by the women of the nation. No sacrifice we can make for them is too great. We here hardly realize there is a war, but the time will come when Great Britain and her allies will need the products from our farms and fields. It becomes our duty not to think in terms of profit, gains or bar ter, but to stand shoulder to shoulder behind the cause and behind our men who are offering their all. C A N A D A ’ s Thursday, December 5, 1940= For rest or play—Vancouver, and- Victoria are ideal for* ai thoroughly enjoyable winter vacation; Warmdaysandcoolrefreshingnights.. Excellent golf courses—tnyriad;sights;. in the mountains andhy the seashore;.. Riding, tennis, motoring, fishing .... Canada's Evergreen Playgroundoffers- them all, in an unexcelled! setting. Special Winter rates at hotels*.- The- new Hotel Vancouver's spacious' rooms and delightful' accommoda-- tions will add to the pleasure? of'your" stay in Vancouver. ATTRACTIVE RAIL FARES FEBRUARY 4-J | p|a|JT-5lO 7 8 Q 10 ALWAYS USE CANADIAN NATIONAL TELEGRAPHS — MONEY ORDERS—EXPRESS SPEED, DEPENDABILITY, SAFETY Reduced sleeping-car fares. Low meal rates on trains* TRAVEL WEST THE JASPER WAY USING THE AIR-CONDITIONED CONTINENTAL LIMITED Full information from any ticket agent cheesecloth. (Boiled coffee be, prepared without the "t i This was spoken several months ago and our people have risen nobly* to the emergency. Our county has voted $27,000 for war purposes. They also purchased an airport site for over $10,000 as a county project and have since leased it to the government at a dollar a year. That is all that we have got out of it. It is,-not like the dollar-a-year men advertised ‘ around ■here in the last few days. Another $10,000 has been given to the Red Cross Society, and $7,000 has been set aside for patriotic purposes. More can be had if it is needed. Such is the spirit of our people in Huron, such is the spirit of Canada, such is the spirit of the empire; and with God’s will we shall win for democracy. Fluffy Omelet 2 tablespoons quick cooking tapioca THE QUIET HOUR DOING THE IMPOSSIBLE “The things which are impossible with men. are possible with God.” — Luke 18: 27. “The things which are impossible with men” are legion. A person is not very old when he discovers there are things he cannot do. Sometimes this discovery comes as a distinct shock, ♦ Business and Professional Directory 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. J. W. BUSHFIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money To Loan. Office — Meyer Block, Wingham i HARRY FRYFOGLE Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director Furniture and Funeral Service Ambulance Service. Phones: Day 109W. Night 109J. DR. R. L. STEWART PHYSICIAN- Telephone 29 J. 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. | DR. W. M. CONNELL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Phone 19 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 W. A. CRAWFORD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Located at the office of the late Dr. J. P. Kennedy. Phone 150 Wlrtgham, Frederick A< Parker OBTKOFATH Offices; Centre fttyWIngtomn and Main LlMowcl, Lf®iowol Day®; Tuesdays and Fri day®. Osteopathic mid Electric 'Treat ment®, Foot Technique, IPhone 272 Wingham A. R. & F. E. DUVAL CHIROPRACTORS CHIROPRACTIC and ELECTRO THERAPY North Street — Wingham Telephone 300. By R.J.SCOTT’ WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE ClRjojlAi f 51 Lofty mountain SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK ..,’_A Inti.. <)!!>.Al ACROSS 1. A long view 6 Short for automobiles 11. Resembling ashes 12. Beast of burden 13. Slope 14. Pertaining to the moon : 15. Thrice (mus.) 16. Keel-billed cuckoo 17. Close-haired • dog 20. A swine 22. A republic 23. Afresh 25. Exclude 26. Piercing tool 28. Tier 30 Indefinite article 31. Decay 32. Sun god S3. Apex 35 Female deer 86 Fig pen 37 Cavern 39. Wealthy 41. Guided 42. French coin 43. Regret 45. A number 48, Bury 51. Change 53. Aforesaid thing 54. French City 55. Advantage 56. Skins down l.Muge i.«maiIWand t,Swin®tt i.Number *.ln«ect 6. Whole 7. Eskimo tool 8. Bird 9 Arabian state 10. Hindu garment 18. Uranium (sym.) 19. Protected 20. Guide ropes 21. Forward 22. Sudden fright 24. Deserv ing of 25. Club 27. Court 29 Road 34. Artist’s tablet 36. Scurry - 38, Norse god 40. Large mot? 43. Frees 44. One 46 Pit for water 47 Crude metals 49, Greek letter 50. Slender stick 52. Falsehood 1 2 3 U £ 11 15 vr. 17 15 25 30 % 33 34 % i 37 ✓«/ W 44 %H&44 S& R] o K E h|o R N V A|S T E RRteSEE MN C T S H E W A R E TjeidfInIeIV 7 a IO H 16 21 % 24 242© 32 36 40 i 45 46 47 52 • : <CowS HEAR. LOHPbN qiVE. r LESS MILK, btoRXINq A.KP EYE.MINqtAF-r'ER. ■-TiIe. Noise. of BOM&inq^ Twelve, tloufes . BE.FoR.F_ H All VEG or NEW GUINEA . ALLOY/ STRIPS ’ oF GAME Sll< FEET LOK AS A CEREMONIAL RITE I Copper. Kt-fchEH aw $PA,-T1LLAS USED* ift 4<000 YEARS Aqo A.FLE.IDENTICAL. Wl-Hl YdoGfe. Of A MODE-R.14 K|<cUE.H■IKS ■MUGGS AND SKEETER itf HeY, /HOGGSH i v/rn-t Me. 7b ihe I t>coR. QUICKLY l’ v McrruiHG’.! He dos; vVil/MT I>W> VOL) DO KUOCKEb AMt> WljfeM TO (HE VOCK AfckEb ME It* X -4 THOUGHT AY FAMILY < LVCULL RE. IKl7ERt-STEC>. By Wally bishop———........ .................... ..