HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1972-02-10, Page 8Page 8 Times-Advocate k February 19t 1972
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Foci's N'Fcincies
By Gwyn
ekt,„.4ed me. oforteeeetio
Chef Herm Dettmer commences to make his famous 'Shop Screwy'.
And ends by sitting down to enjoy a plate of the delectable, finished
product.
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Recipe Box
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41/2 " x 21/2 " loaf pans. Cover and
let rise in a warm and humid
place until double in bulk (about 1
hour) Bake at 400 degrees F. for
20 to 25 minutes.
Yield; 4 loaves.
Come on, you fellows, don't be
intimidated by our editor. He's
just jealous. Be a sport and share
your favorite recipes with us.
Tenderleaf
TEA
BAGS 60's 79
Instant or Quick
QUAKER
OATS bob
.55
Stokelys Red Regular or
KIDNEY New Orleans
BEANS 2/39 °
free teaspoon
PANCAKE MIX2lbs.42 °
Libbys
SPAGHETTI 19ticin z. 2/53 °
Aunt Jemina Buttermilk or Reg.
By Anne Bailey
ised
and
t And with 'haat deftly make
ra
the flout and the laid to
She tidied up the tiny rooms and
the paste.
made out house a home;
A place that VII terneMber
wlietevet I might loam.
she
aer apton•Nas a
&fess hd made without
The. print was dark and ptactical,
much style,
she ptouclly wove it
with a smile.
She loved her home and family and all
things good and chaste.
To me she was a lady with an apron
round her waist.
When I die and go to Heaven, as
I hope I surely will,
And Gabriel blows his
trumpet from his throne upon
the hill;
I'll search among the angels
in their gossamer and lace
Until I find that special
one with an apron
\round her waist.
. — If you choose his valentine
from our selection of
• DRESS SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS
• TIES • CUFF LINKS
• KNIT SLACKS
• SPORT COATS
Sunday Hours
1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
MIDDLETON Dry 5
,z7
PHONE 235-1570 EXETER
CHICKEN
$139
one whole chicken
Bicks
PICKLES 39 °
Baby Dills 15 oz. Yum Yum 15 oz. or
Cubit Relish 12 oz.
V
Heat & Eat
Golden Ripe
BANANAS lb. 10
U.S.A.
CELERY HEARTS 45 °
Waxed Good Size
TURNIPS ea.23
Cooking
ONIONS- 10 lb, bag 49°
Valley Farms Frozen
PEAS 5 lb. choice 99‘
Rupert Haddock 20 oz.
FISH & CHIPS 79'
Old South New 16 oz. size Ank
ORANGE JUICE 59
Makes 66-2/3 oz.
Marra's
PIES
Apple or Raisin
Big 9 oz. 45
Bake & Serve
ROLLS
pkg, of 1235
OPEN FRIDAY
NITES'TII. NINE
Stokely KERNEL
CORN 7 oz. tin 2 /2 9 °
Libbys Fancy
PEACH
HALVES 28 oz. 47
McLarens
PEANUT
BUTTER 3 lb. jar
919
turn out on a lightlyfloured board.
Divide into 4 equal portions and
round into balls; cover and let
rest 10 minutes. Mould into
loaves, place in greased 81/2 " x
Puss in Boots
CAT
FOOD
15 oz.118
Aylmer
Tomato or Vegetable
SOUP
2 /2 7
Lucas Arthur
MINCED HAM
401.
HE
Ne
j o•
Neioz
wetchup
The final item of last week's
news from the Greenway
correspondent made us smile,
but it also struck a responsive
note.
"The trouble with most church
meetings," he wrote, "is that
they start at 8:00 sharp and end
at 9:30 dull." I gather he spoke
from experience.
He has an advantage over most
of us if the meetings he attends
close at 9:30. Many of us have sat
long past that hour while
posteriors and brains grow
numb.
Dull.
That's the word, alright, to
describe many of the lack-lustre
activities of to-day's church.
Where's the joy, where's the
enthusiasm, where's the ex-
citement that permeated the first
Christian churches we read about
in Acts? We have the same
Leader, we have the same rules,
we have the same message, but
what we certainly haven't got is
the same spirit of enthusiasm
that swept those early churches.
This is the season for
congregational annual meetings
which consist more times than
not, of two or three dozen
dispirited persons sitting
around grumbling about
decreased attendance and
membership, decreased givings,
increased deficits and increased
disinterest in all phases of the
church, These good people
furrow their brows and scrat-
ch their heads to try and think up
'schemes' to get the wayward
and the truant back into the fold,
whereby the coffers would be
augmented which would end all
their problems, they think,
Very often, all that is ac-
complished at these affairs is to
deepen the depression about the
whole, unsolvable, deplorable
state.
They're missing the boat . And
according to Eugene L. Smith,
executive secretary in the U.S.
for the World Council of Chur-
ches, they're also missing a great
opportunity.
He says, "1971 was a year of
search for instant salvation,
Whatever problems North
America has, it has no problem of
indifference to religious faith.
"In a leaderless age, many seek
divine leadership; in a complex
world, many are seeking simple
answers; in a tense time, they
want to show love; in a
despairing decade, they want
hope reaffirmed; and, in our
accelerated life tempo, they
crave for instant salvation, Like
all mass movements, this one
combines the elements both of
hope and hearsay."
Smith goes on to say that the
latest hero of the American youth
culture is Jesus Christ. Songs
about Jesus . _ not only from
the musical, Jesus Christ,
Superstar, but many others top
the hit parade.
The evaluations of the Jesus
revolution vary. Some see it as an
outright blasphemous fad. But
perhaps the most eloquent fact
about it is that people are un-
willing to live through a period of
great uncertainty without any
faith.
The hunger for faith is
reflected in the entertainment
world by the 'got religion' trend.
This trend is not limited to
Christianity. There has been a
growth in the Jewish youth cult
and there has been a fantastic
growth of the 'new religions' of
America. Groups of Buddhist,
Muslim, Hindu, Spiritualist are
increasing hand over fist and
there is a boom in the oc-
cult...astrology, witchcraft and
even devil worship.
Meanwhile back at the chur-
ches, membership declines
steadily.
Moderator of the Presbyterian
Church of Canada, Dr. Murdo
Nicolson, has stated this is a good
sign. "We're getting rid of the
dead wood," he says. This could
be true, but unless the members
who are left begin to show some
sign of life they may find they're
hanging on to something as dead
as a dodo.
The trouble is that many of us
don't really know what we're
hanging on to.
Recently, I came across a sign
which asked, "If you were
arrested for being a Christian
would there be enough evidence
to convict you?"
At a group I sat in with this
week we were all asked to write
down the ten commandments.
Only one could remember all ten.
The average was five,
A year or two ago I was a guest
at the Muslim Mosque in London.
A few of the children were asked,
at random, to come to the front of
the assembly and state why they
were 'Muslims. With no difficulty
at all they rhymed off what they
believed and why. I wondered
how many of our Sunday School
children, or church members
could so clearly state why they
were Christians,
It seems to me that if those of
us who are left in the Church
want others to join us we're going
to have to understand what it is
we've got to share with them and
present it in a manner that will
not entertain them, but will spark
their interest and excite them.
We need more studying of our
"book of rules" to find out what it
was that changed the small group
of defeated followers of Jesus into
exuberant joyful, undaunted men
and women who turned the whole
world upside down.
Then, when we've found out
what we're really talking about
and are showing that Christianity
really works, we will have earned
the right to offer it to others,
As Eugene Smith has pointed
out the time is ripe and the op-
portunity is now.
This week, 'cook of the week'
laurels go to Herm Dettmer of
Carling Street.
His delicious "Shop-Screwy"
came about as a result of a
camping weekend with friends.
While sitting around the fire, one
night, someone expressed a wish
for Chinese food.
A raid of the larders of the
different camps brought forth the
ingredients to make the tasty
dish they labelled Shop-Screwy.
Now, it's a family favorite and
the Dettmers like to eat it with
hot buttered toast.
Herm's Shop Screwy
11/2 lbs. of mixed ground chuck
and hamburger browned in large
frying pan
1 cup coarsely chopped celery
1/3 cup chopped green pepper
4 small onions sliced
1 can of sliced mushrooms
11/2 cups minute rice cooked
according to directions on
package.
Brown the meat in large frying
pan. Saute in hot margarine the
mushrooms, celery, green
pepper and onions. (Do not over
cook, the vegetables should
remain crisp and rather
transparent.) Add the vegetable
mixture to the browned meat and
season to taste with salt and
pepper.
Just before serving, fluff up the
cooked rice and add blob of
butter. Mix with the meat and
vegetables and serve with a
sprinkling of soya sauce.
Herm's Dark Rye Bread
2 pkgs. active dry yeast
1/2 cup warm water
1 teaspoon sugar
2 cups milk
La cup sugar
2 tablespoons shortening
4 teaspoons salt
1 1/3 cups water
51 2 cups dark Rye floor 4 1 /2 cups all purpose flour
Sprinkle the yeast in 1/2 cup
warm water (105-115 degrees F.)
in which 1 teaspoon sugar has
been dissolved; let stand 15
minutes, then stir well. Scald
milk; add sugar. Add stirred
yeast mixture to cooled milk
mixture. Stir in 41/2 cups
all purposeflour and beat with a
spoon until creamy and free of
lumps.
Gradually add 51/a cups of rye
flour, mixing well after each
addition until mixture is too
difficult to mix with a spoon.
Turn dough • out onto a floured
board and knead (8-10 minutes)
until smooth and satiny. Shape
into a smooth ball and place in a
greased bowl, turn ball of dough
over in bowl to grease surface.
Cover and let rise in a warm and
humid place (80-85 degrees F.)
until double in bulk (about 1
hour). Punch down, let rise again
until double in bulk (about 34
hour). Punch down again and
Chilly camp
for Nomads
Four families of the Ausable
River Nomads attended a winter
campout, appropriately entitled,
"Chilly-Willy", at Embro last
week-end,
Activities included
snowmobiling, toboganning,
skating, contests, a dance
Saturday evening and church
service Sunday morning.
Those who attended the
campout, hosted by the Oxford
Rovers chapter of N.C.H.A.
were: Alex and Norma Meikle,
Bill and Donna Perry, Don and,
Marie Brunzlow and Ken and
Marie Broom who took along
Steve and Agnes Mack as guests.
The group was fortunate to be
winners of two pre-registration
draws and a spot dance prize,
Mrs, James Simpson, Anne and
Robert, of Exeter, motored to
Agincourt, Sunday, to attend the
funeral of Mrs. Simpson's
brother, Gordon Sellers, of
'Sunrise Farm', Metropolitan
Toronto. The funeral was held
Monday at Ogden Funeral Home,
Agincourt, with burial in old St.
Andrew cemetery, Scarboro.
Edna Caldwell, Almira Ford,
Cora Smith, and Mary Hern
attended the Charlie Pride show
in Cobo Hall, Detroit, Sunday.
Stokely
VEGETABLES looz. 2 /3 5'
Cream Corn, Peas, Lima or Green Beans
Schneiders
CORNED BEEF 2Y2 to 3 lb. average piece
PORK CHOPS or ROAST
Schneiders
The SAVINGS
BACON ENDS 1 lb, vac pack
69 Schneiders Beef pkg. of 4
STEAKETTES "ellaa:
Schneiders
Country Style
Pure Pork
AUSAGE lb.S9
0
e49'
b98'
e69`
49'
Schneiders Breaded 24 oz. bag