The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1971-03-11, Page 8Page 8
Times-Advocate, March 11, 1971
Recipe Box
Hamburg
Cottage Cheese Pie
1 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup finely chopped green
pepper
2 tablespoons butter
1 pound minced beef
3.41 teaspoon salt
1,4 teaspoon pepper
I tsp. Worcestershire sauce
2 tbsp. flour
1 baked 9-inch pie shell
1 cup cottage cheese
2 beaten eggs
Dash paprika
Saute''onion and green pepper
in butter until onion is tran-
sparent. Add meat and brown,
Stir in seasonings and flour.
Spread meat mixture on pie shell.
Blend cottage cheese with eggs
and pour over meat. Sprinkle
with paprika. Bake at 350 degree
F until brown (about 40 minutes).
4 to 6 servings.
Mrs, Mabel Hockey, formerly
of Exeter, will undergo surgery
at St. Joseph's Hospital, March
12,
Mrs. Priscilla Mack is a
patient in South Huron Hospital.
Bob Johnston, London,
returned Monday evening after
spending the weekend with his
parents.
Pork Chops
or Roast lb69 °
Kitchener Packers Sweet Pickled
Cottage
Roll s
Beef Cuttings for
Stew
Sirloin or T-Bone & Wing
Steaks
Back Special
Bacon
Sliced
th.69 °
$ 1 0 9
lb I
Schnieders Whole Cut up
Breaded Heat & Eat
Chicken
Fresh
Beef
Liver
Schneiders
Minced
Ham
24 oz. 139
Pkge.
MOTHER CHECKS WORK — Mrs. Ned Armstrong checks son George's Grade V work during Education
Week at EPS. Other students shown are Bradley Taylor, Bradley Brintnell,Paul Railings and Heather Meikle.
HAMBURG COTTAGE CHEESE PIE — Here is an unusual way to
, stretch one pound of minced beef to serve 6. Well-seasoned browned
beef is spread in a baked pie shell then a cottage cheese-egg mixture is
poured over the meat before baking. Hamburg Cottage Cheese Pie is
good enough to serve for special occasions.
STOP!
Before You Go To Rome ... Or
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King Size
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St. Lawrence
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Caramel, .Le Mon,
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2 lb. bag
14 oz.
LUNCHEON MEAT 12 oz. tin
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16c off 32 oz.
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2 lb. Plastic
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BANANAS
Golden Ripe 2 lbs 25''
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"A radical stance concerning
the place of religion in education
is needed," states the Board of
Christian Education of The
United Church of Canada. "Such
a stance is already shared by a
few on an ecumenical and in-
terfaith basis," it says in the
March issue of its magazine for
parents called Parentalk.
In summary, the United
Church article makes two points:
1, Denominational religiOus
struetion has no place in the
schools of a society which has as
many religious groups as there
are in Canada; 2. Religion is too
important, too central to man's
life to be ignored or treated
cavalierly in our educational
system.
The Board supports the point of
view that the study of the faiths of
men should be part of the regular
school curriculum; that moral or
character development must be
SCHOOLS ARE FOR PEOPLE is the theme of Education Week being observed in schools. Here, Exeter taken more seriously in our
Public School Grade I teacher, Mrs. William Thompson, checks the printing of Graham Solomon and Robert schools if the education system is
Preszcator while two mothers, Mrs. Nancy Skinner and Mrs. Marilyn Hohner, look on. Parents are invited to in fact to prepare children for
attend classes at most of the district schools this week, T-A. photo living.
Religion too important to
be treated lightly in schools
`Are we a new people?'
speaker asks audience
A New People for a New Age
was the theme of the World Day
of Prayer held at Trivitt
Memorial Anglican Church,
Friday afternoon.
Speaker for the occasion,
Doreen Baker, RN said with the
many advancements in the fields
of science we are indeed living in
a new age. But she wondered if
we really are a new people.
She said it would appear that
we are living in a society based
on intolerance . . . intolerance to
races, to youth and to the elderly.
Miss Baker stressed that
mankind must strive for more
understanding from the other
person's point of view.
She told the large audience of
ladies of her two year stay in
Malaysia where she worked with
a five member medical team sent
there by CARE to set up a
HIGH
QUALITY
MEATS
PERSONAL
SERVICE
March of Values
Recent acquisitions of .fluron
County Library and available at
the local library include:
The Perfect Wife,. by Doris
Leslie: 19th. century England
portrayed in. telling of the life of
the heroine from milliner's shop
to high society, Mary Anne is the
milliner who became the wife of
Disraeli.
The Drifting Continents, by
Willy Ley: Willy Ley, best known
for his writings in the field of
space and rocket technology
turns to the theory of continental
drift.
Canadian Writers, ed. By Guy
Sylvestre, and others: A
biographical dictionary of
Canadian writers, a useful source
of ready information which gives
a sketch of the lives of several
Canadian authors, and an
evaluation of their work.
Involuntary Journey to Siberia,
by Andrei Amalrick: A Russian
non-conformist intellectual gives
a first hand account of his arrest,
trial and sentence to serve on a
collective farm in Siberia.
My Friend, the Hangman, by
ocssk re) eta
The Times-Advocate is
happy to extend birthday
wishes to the following
persons celebrating bir-
thdays:
MRS. JEAN MANSON,
Victoria Street, 87, March
11,
MRS. ADELLA
FISCHER, Dashwood, 87,
March 17,
W. C PEARCE, Exeter,
88, March 15.
We are always happy to
acknowledge the birthdays
of our senior citizens.
Marjorie Dilkes
Hairdressing
Shop
CLOSED
FOR
VACATION
March 20
through
March 30
Andy O'Brien: Sport editor of
Weekend Magazine relates
dramatic encounters in sport,
crime and war. Letting his
memory work,. he recounts his
experiences in which behind the
face of fame he found warmth
and simplicity.
Sacred concert
at Trivitt church
Following a special service of
evensong at Trivitt Memorial
Anglican Church, Sunday
evening, when the choir of St,
James (Westminster) church
will sing the service under the
direction of Gordon Atkinson, a
recital of sacred music will be
presented.
Flutist David Kerr will be
accompanied on the organ by
Norman McBeth.
The service and concert are
open to the public who are also
invited to the reception af-
terwards in the Parish Hall.
But the Boardgoes further.. It is
convinced that certain fun-
damental questions on religion
must be openly dealt with in the
school system. "What is life
for?"; "What does it mean to be
human?"; "What responsibility
do we have for our fellow men?"
The Board sees these questions
as implicit in the ideas students
meet in science, history,
literature and other classes. They
are hidden in the disciplinary and
other attitudes of the schools
towards their students. They are
to be found in the assumptions
teavhers bring to their teaching.
The question before society is,
VO5
g."
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therefore, not whether to keep or
remove religion in the schools,
Religion is inevitably there, and
ought to be there. The question is
how best to handle it.
The March issue of Parentalk
is an attempt to get some an-
swers to this question. Parents
are being asked to find out what's
happening about religion in the
schools their children attend; to
do some hard and new thinking
about what they would like to see
happening; to work e. with
teachers, administrators,
trustees, politicians and others to
bring about the changes which
will give religion a more honest
place in education.
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surgical unit in a small hospital.
She explained the difficulties of
working in an under developed
country with almost non existent
equipment and against the
superstition ingrained into the
native people by their medicine
men.
However, her work and efforts
•in Malaysia were most rewar-
ding, and she commented, "The
personal cost is nothing com-
pared to what you get back from
such an experience."
The speaker said she admired
the Malaysians, whose lives
moved leisurely with little stress
and strain, and who had plenty of
time to look after their old people
and listen to their young.
She was critical of western
society with its great rush and
pressures which seems to leave it
indifferent to the needs of others.
Under the convenership of Mrs.
G. R. Doidge of the Anglican
Church, ladies from five other
churches lead the service which
was prepared by women from the
Caribbean countries.
The leaders were Mrs. Doidge,
Mrs. Austin Gedcke, Pentecostal,
Mrs. Norman Stanlake,
Presbyterian, Mrs. Harmen
Heeg, Bethel Reformed, Mrs. J.
DeWeerd, Christian Reformed.
Assisting as readers were Mrs.
Wellington Brock and Mrs. H.
Murray of the United Church and
Mrs. Wilfred Jarvis,
Presbyterian.
The organist was Robert
McIntosh who also accompanied
the choir and soloist, Patricia
Connon.
The largest offering in many
years was received. The amount
was $83.00 and will aid a variety
of ecumenical projects.
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