HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1942-05-14, Page 6A X .VVINGUA1V1 ADVANCE-TIMES Thursday, May 1401., lea
S'14ALLOT
CLOVES SET
OUT IN TRENICH . -
HICIMISSIr
Household
Hints
By MRS. MARY MORTON E 5
SCOTTS SCRAP BOOK , „By R. J, C9-1-1.
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•Ia'ree, 4...•
satin,
KIND ( you 4sT A
*11 ArtiSi +AB 3.rriu' slusti.tati wouLD 51a41.s. t4At1
yET? HUSBANDS
"AlwGarYaanldnaPeaulenf,,,Now
rwiatiiskI could hardlyl raor
hmfbi ion adnust mffdafr aOneandryniedsxrd al weehsauu 18:
close my hands,
rte
ds
At ter taking
swelling left my
able to Climb a Flardudiettl..8:1hVaeaVeirnir more bather with rheumatism or
neuritis and advise any person' suffering as I have t6 use
tIVC8. They give quick relief.
William J. Tracey, Toronto, Ont.
"Sick Far Years in Hospital...- Now Fins"
I had a bad case of biliousness and constant head-aches and back-aches. I became so 'III had to go to a hospital. Noth-ing I tried would help untillstarted taking Fruit-a- tives. In a very ....-
short time my troubles disap-eared. Now I have no more h eadaches or backaches and can
do my housework without help. Mrs. E. Durban, London. One •
the alkali in soap has a weakening
effect on wool as well as making it
harsh.
Wool should be moved about as
little as possible while it is wet. For
some reason, moving wet wool around
too much makes it leit',•and once that
happens nothing can be done to re-
store its soft resiliency. For this rea-
son, too it should never be soaked, but
should be dipped up and down in the
cleansing process rather than rubbed,
pounded or jerked, and a squeezing
rather than wringing process be used
to remove water.
Woollens should be dried in a warm
place 'but away from contact with dir-
ect, heat. Bright sunshine will make
them yellow. To dry blankets hang
them lengthwise over a clean clothes-
line 'with half on each side. Clothes-
pins stretch the edges. Reverse the
blanket several times after is is part-
ially dry, and from time •to time
straighten the edges and squeeze out
water as it collects at edges.
Eat Clams - Five Die
Victoria, - Residents of British
Columbia, Washington and Oregon
were warned against eating of clams
and mussels after five deaths were re-
ported as a result of eating shellfish
dug on North Pacific salt water
beaches. .
Hostess Building At Port Albert
Johnson Bros., contractors, have the
contract for the erection of a Y.W.C.
A. hostess building at Port Albert an&
expect to begin construction soon, The
new building when finished and fur-
nished will be Used to accomodate
women who come from a distance to
visit relatives and friends among the
airmen, - Goderich Sigrial-Star.
Wife Preservers
MONUMENTS at first cost.
Having our factory equipped with the
most modern machinery for the eye-
cution' of high-class work, we ask you
to see the largest display of monu-
ments of any retail factory in Ontario..
All finished by sand blast machines.
We import our granites from the
Old Country quarries direct, in the
rough. You can save all, local deal-
ers' agents' and middleman profits by
seeing us.
E. J. Skelton & Son
at West End Bridge-WALKERTON
creagere
Don't throw out that old leatherpoelcet-book. Clean it up and use it or give it to
someone who can use it, and thus help•
conserve the supply of leather for vita:
military and civilian needs. This is cap-
daily necessary if the purse is made of
imported leather.
Business and Professional Directory
WELLINGTON FIRE
Insurance Company
Est. 1840
An all Canadian Company which
has faithfully served its policy hold-
ers for over a century.
Head Office - Toronto
COSENS & BOOTH, Agents
Wingham
DR. W. M. CONNELL
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phone 19
J. 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 1093
THOMAS FELLS
AUCTIONEER
REAL ESTATE SOLD
A Thorough Knowledge of Farm
Stock.
Phone 231, Winghani
Help The + .Red cross
L
TEA
THE MIXING BOWL
'ACROSS
,1. Feminine
name
5. Part of
derrick
9. Conducts
11. Funeral
song
12. A water-
course
13. /Afeless
14. Half ems
15. Body of
water
17. Behold
18. Precious
stones
20. English
river
23. Opens
(poet.)
27. Rulers
29. Skill
30. Bestow
upon
21. Very slow
(haus.)
33. Animal
doctor
(abbr.)
34. Bivalve
mollusk
36. Paradise
28. Shore
recesses
39. Ligneous
41. United
States Sen.
ate (abbr.) t
44. Undivided
45. Over (posit.)
48, Yellow stone
$0. Former Ruis-
'atart money
55. Ablaze
511. Vessel tor
Ikedds,
$4.11sad
coValliagai
Etortasitaii
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12,
14
20 21
30
53
Zb
rze"). 39 90
4t 4a .,?7 45.
6
2. University 21.. Chopped
officer' 22. Size of type
3. Peripds of 24. Talk
time 25. Disease of
4. Fuss rye
5. Storage crib 26. Ceases
6. Metallic 28. Maligns
rocks 32. Associate
7. Mythical 35. Shoot of a
monster plant
& Apportion 37. Compass
10. Stops point
temporarily (abbr.)
11. Part Of 40. Percolate
clock 41. A state
16. A direction 42. Couch
18. Hebrew 43.. Rod for
measure meat
19. Therefore 45. Hautboy 51. Shoshonean
20. Crossbeam 46. Jewish month Indian
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Z34
37 'Vf.
1
23 as, 25 26
47. Twilled
fabrics
49. Land-
measures
I I 2 3 '- rzr 5 6 •1
9 to.
15 16
MUGGS AND SKEETER
SAY, WHAT's
GOING oni
MUGGS
eur rrt RIGHT
lr4-rI-1 OUTFIELD
OF OUR BASEBALL
'PAPKI!
tI
. (5
IT'S A LITTLE,
VICTORY GARDEN
I PLANTED!!
"!1AT'S
THE IDEA...' e•-f EN EEPIE
IS PITcHIN 'NOBODY
EVEN HITS THE BALL/
ANYHOW,,
lOr AIMS ALLAN
Nydire Ilan. is its
SHOULDER YOUR HOE!
Hello Homemakers! Oh, it's off to
work we go, with shovel and a hoe!
And it's dig, dig, dig, so corn will
grow big . , Everyone who has ex-
perienced the joys of gardening,•=knows
the thrill of having fresh, crisp vege-
tables at hand's grasp-vitamin-loaded
vegetables so important in our every-
day diet,
* * *
For home gardens this year, lettuce,
radish, spinach, wax or green beans,
Swiss chard, carrots, a few tomato
plants and onions grown in sets, are.
recommended. Rural communities
especially will want to be self-support-
Ug to conserve the family budget.
''15or-igt attempt too Much. Choose the
vegetables that are easy to grow and
be on the watch for your garden fifth-
columnists-weeds and bugs, For
those short of space, herb garden are
easy to cultivate and herbs are so
useful to add that extra flavour• to
dishes and give "appetite-appeal" to
your, meals. Learn to make use of
them-that is one way to thrift and
tasty cooking.
* * * *
Don't be surprised if you find gar-
den tools scarce-there's a metal short-
Age--just try to make the old ones
do, Fertilizers and seeds, too, should
be used with extra care to make them
go farther than ever.
* * * *
NUTRI-THRIFT MENU
Breakfast
Oatmeal with Prunes and Milk
Soft. Cooked Egg .- Whole Wheat
Toast
Coffee or Milk
Dinner
Baked Potato - Steamed Asparagus
Whole Wheat Bread and Butter
Chocolate Pudding
Supper
Fish Soup
Cabbage and Carrot Salad
Pan Scones - Fruit Gelatin Pudding
Milk
RECIPES
Liver Loaf
lb. beef liver
1 small onion
Few spilgs parsely
2 cups whole wheat bread
crumbs
1 tsp, salt
1 egg
1% cups milk
Wipe liver. Cut into slices and put
through food chopper with onion, Add
finely cut parsley and remaining in-
gredients. Pour into greased loaf pan.
Bake in electric oven at 350 degrees
for 80-40 minutes.
* * 3IC
Oven Steamed Asparagus
Cut off flower parts of stalks (as far
down as they will snap), wash, re-
move scales and tiein a bunch. Place
flat in a shallow casserole, add a cup
of hot water, salt and a tight-fitting
cover. Cook With liver loaf in electric
oven for 30 mins. Serve with Velvet
Sauce.
* * * *
Fruit Gelatin Pudding
1 tb. gelatin
Y4, cup cold water ,
A cup boiling water
1 cup fruit juice
11/2 cups canned fruit (pears,
peaches or cherries)
Soak gelatin in cold water for 5 min-
utes, Add boiling water, stirring until
gelatin is dissovled. Add fruit juice
and fruit cut into small pieces. Pour
into %bowl or mould which has been
rinsed in cold water. Chill in electric
refrigerator.
* * a *
TAKE A TIP
1. Place bulbs, annuals and perennials
that are not hardy in a new location
each year. Do this for insect and
disease control.
2. Transplanting should be done in the
cool of the evening.
3.1f your garden is small you cannot
plant everything. Sow seeds best
suited to the soil in your garden
and to the amount of time you plan
to spend on gardening. Sow seeds
of vegetables that are easily stored:
hardy winter cabbage, late potatoes,
onions, carrots, parsnips, turnips,
etc. Plant your vegetables that are
harvested early in the same row as
the slow-germinating seeds, i.e.:
plant radishes over rows of corn,
and cucumbers in between your po-
tato hills. If space is limited, sow
your herbs in the flower bed, but
by all means plant herbs such as
parsley, thyme, sage, horseradish,
nasturtium, mint, etc.
* * ,*
QUESTION BOX
Mrs. M.C. asks: "Have you a recipe
for Raisin Pie using a small amount
of sugar,"
Answer: Raisin Pie without gran-
ulated sugar.
1 egg
11/2 tbs flour
, tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. nutmeg
tsp. cloves
Vs tsp. salt
• cup molasses
• cup buttermilk
3 tbs. lemon juice
2 cups chopped raisins
Beat egg; add flour, spices and, salt,
Then stir in molasses, buttermilk, lem-
on juice and raisins. Pour into a lin-
ed nine-inch pie plate. Bake in elec-
tric oven at 450 degrees for ten min-
utes, Reduce to 350 degrees and bake
30 mins, longer.
Mrs. J,T,B. asks; "Why does sponge
cake turn out soggy and small in vol-
ume? Is it overmixing?"
Answer: The egg whites, should be
beaten until the mixture, is stiff but
not dry, If the folding-in is very
gently done, there is no particular
danger of overmixing, Continue until
no flakes of egg white are visible.
Mrs. D.B. asks: "Should liver be
scalded before cooked?"
Answer: Beef and calf live do not•
need to be scalded, but pork liver is
more easily assimilated if boiling wat-
er is poured over it before the pieces
are sauted or baked.
* * * *
Anne Allan invites you to write to
her cio The Advance-Times news-
paper. Just send in your questions
on homemaking problems and watch
this little corner of the column for
replies.
Hints On I
Fashions
..11111111111111n lllllll 11111111 lllllll usu
Brown and pink is one of the pret-
tiest of all color combinations and it
seems rather odd that it is not used
more frequently by designers. This
smart and serviceable brown frock gets
all dressed up with the aid of a dusty
pink jacket of the same weight as the
sheer brown woollen used for the
frock.' The pink is lightly shadow-
plaided in brown to tone. This jack-
et has tailored collar and cuffs of the
brown woollen and two large patch,
pockets at the hips, The dreg has
boy: pleats that start below the hipline,
Garden-
IHUMUS l MCC/C1111 1111 I III ll MU 1111,
Graph
When a new recipe calls for shallots,
young onions often have to be substi-
tuted because shallots are seldom
found in the market. These cousins
of the onion, however, can be grown
in the home garden'.
GI4ALLOT BULB
it] 5-4
For mild onion flavoring grow
shallots
As illustrated in the Garden-Graph,
the maturing bulb of shall'ots 'separ-
ates into section called "cloves".
These small bulbs are planted just as
onion sets are planted,
Many seed catalogues now list shal-
lots, Sets planted this spring will
mature in late summer. When dried
they can be kept for almost a year.
Shallots are multipliers and one set
will produce a cluster 'of bulbs or clov-
es when mature.
Aside from cooking or flavoring,
shallots are often used for pickling.
Any thinning can be used as green on-
ions.
For a meatless meal try a vegetable
loaf. If you use evaporated milk, dil-
ute it with water drained from cooked
vegetables, thus saving minerals con-
tained therein. This loaf may be ser-
ved with a meat or fish dish if you
wish, or used as the main dish of the
meal. Better file the recipe and use
it occasionally.
Today's Menu
Vegetable Loaf
Stewed Tomatoes
Cauliflower and Apple' Salad
Orange Tapioca Tea
Vegetable Loaf
11/2 c. finely diced green beans
1/2 c. finely diced celery
1/2 c, finely diced carrots
1 tbsp. butter
14, c. irradiated evaporated milk
and
2 tbsps. grated onion
1 tbsp. flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 c. vegetable liquid or water or
% c. bottled milk
1 c. bread crumbs
1 egg
tbsps., dark dry cereal
Cook vegetables in small ainount of
water (to which. 1./e teaspoon salt has
been added) until tender„ saving
ulds that remain, Make white sauce
of butter, flour, salt and mills; add
vegetables, bread crumbs, beaten egg
and cereal, - Bake in loaf in a mod,
orate oven WOO Deg, F.)) about 15
Minutes. Serve with egg or white
sauce Leftover vegetables may be
used, Serves 8,
Orange Tapioca
11/2 c. water
• c, .sugar
34 tsp. salt
• c, quick-cooking -tapioca
1 c. orange juice
f tsp, grated orange rind
314 c. irradiated evaporated milk or
1/2 c, cream
1/2 tsp. lemon juice
Bring water, sugar, orange juice
with the grated rind and salt to a boil
;n, top of double boiler; add tapioca
and bring to_ a brisk boil, stirring con-
stantly, Put over boiling water and
cook five minutes, stirring occasion-
ally. Cool, Whip milk or cream, add
lemon juice and fold into pudding,
serves six.
DO YOU KNOW HOW
TO WASH WOOLLENS
Care in laundering blankets and
other woollens is just one more way
of economizing to release all the new
wool possible for the use of our Arm-
ed Forces.
There are not many rules for cor-
rect •washing of woollens, but break
One of them and the harm is done.
First and most important; use luke-
warm water and a mild soap. Heat
in 'the presence of soap has a bad
effect on wool, and may shrink it,
yellow it, 'felt' it, or make it hard and
boards..
Use two or three rinses of the, same
temperature as the wash water. If a
piece of wool is plunged from warm
soap suds into cold water, the soap
will cake and won't rinse out. And
DR. R. L. STEWART
PHYSICIAN
Telephone 29
A. H. McTAVISH, B.A.
Teeswater, Ontario
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public
and Conveyancer
Office: Gofton House, Wroxeter
every Thursday afternoon 1.30 to
4.30 and by appointment.
. Phone Teeswater 120J.
Frederick A. Parker
OSTEOPATH
Offices: Centre St., Wingham
Osteopathic and Electric Treat-
ments. Foot Technique.
Phone 272. Wingham.
pokO.uto
o'er is Dangerous
Do You have persistent headaches and
backaches? Are you tortured by
made pains In muscles and Joints? A
faulty giver is clogging your whole sYs•
tem. Serious ill health may result.
• Your liver is the largest organ in your body
and most important to yoer health. It supplies
energy to muscles, tissues and glands. If
unhealthy, your body lacks this energy and
becoRes enfeebled-youthful vim disappears.
Again your liver pours out bile to digest food,
get rid of waste and allow proper nourishment to reach your blood. When your liver gots
out of order proper digestion and nourishment
stop-you're poisoned with the waste that
decomposes in your intestines. Nervous
troubles and rheumatic pains arise from this poison. You become constipated, stomach And
kidneys can't work properly. The whole
system is affected. and you feel "rotten," head-
achy, backachy, dizzy, tired out-a ready prey
for sickness and disease.
Thousands of people are never sick, and have
won prompt relief from these miseries with
"Improved Fruit-a-tives Liver Tablets." The
liver is toned up, the other organs function
normally and lasting good health results. Today "Improved Fruita-tives" are Canada's
largest selling liver tablets. They must be good!
Try them yourself NOW. Lek "Fruit-a-tives"
put you Welt on the road to lasting health-
feel like a new person. 25c, 50c.
W. A. CRAWFORD, M.D. J. H. CRAWFORD
Physician and Surgeon
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc..
Located at the office of the late
Dr. J, P. Kennedy. Bonds,' Investments & Mortgages
Wingham -:- Ontario Phone 150 Wingham
J. ALVIN FOX
Licensed Drugless Practitioner
CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS
THERAPY - RADIONIC
EQUIPMENT
Hours by Appointment.
Phone 191 VVingbans
For Life Insurance
and Pension Plans
consult
GEORGE R. MASON
representative
Canada Life Assurance Co.
'VVAL,E.1 BISHOP
CAUSENFMULAkMgEYErNGGThEV 11. GARDEN ,
/4%s -70 S\6.
-4"vc
K. M. MacLENNAN
Veterinary Surgeon
Successor to J. M. McKague
PHONE 196
Wingham, Ontario