The Wingham Advance-Times, 1942-05-28, Page 6Frederick A. Parker
OSTEOPATH
Offices:' Centre St.k Wingham
Osteopathic and Eleatic Treat.
meats, Foot Technique.
Phone 272. Whighatn.
Gd 'THANKS
tvvE14..0,
WINGHAV1 AD VANCg-TIMS Thursday, May nth., 104Z,
011.104111010111441,40+01111110$411*Wip llll p441p14 o 000 fiiiiriquor As illustrated in tile Garden-Graaph,
before setting the tomato, plants, put
a forkful -of well-decayed manure in
the bottom of the holes, if it is avail-
able, Otherwise use compOgt, Mix
the manure and soil together thorough.
ly. If the soil is a very heavy' clay
type, incorporate some ashes, cinders
or sand in the soil before the manure
to assist the .drainage.
TARGET PRACTICE Py Charter
fee BRAY
Pie CHICKS
Hints On Outstandingly Good tif4,4.a Fashions
L
TEA
alerrielerueneother o ro oeewerereeee o o ereveweeea
The Bray Chick does the trick,
i.et me show you the proof, Place
roorrhercrder callberocr No writing, No
A. C. Adams, Wingham, or
W. T. Sillick, Teeswater.
sommaiammosammaimm
Thilaillalesolfeleeesnousevoloe
00111.01101e1
By MRS, MARY MORTON
i
Variety Sandwiches-one of Cheese
Spread, Egg Salad, Grated Carrot and
Lettuce - Fruit Cup in Jar, Chocolate
Chip Cookies, Milk.
* * * *
RECIPES
Meat Loaf
1 lb. ground beef
%• lb, ground pork liver
% lb. bulk sausage
6 tbs. wheat germ
% a large onion, finely chopped
1 tsp. salt
;4 tsp. each pepper and celery salt
% tsp. sage
2 tbs, chili sauce
6 tbs, milk
Mix all ingredients thoroughly. Turn
on to wax paper and mold into a loaf.
Bake in a shallow pan in a 350 degree
F. electric oven for 1% hours.
* * * *
Boston Brown Bread
1 cup cornmeal
1 cup all-purpose flour
2 tsp. baking powde
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. soda
1 cup graham flour
2 cups buttermilk
% cup molasses
1% cups seeded raisins dredged
with flour
Sift together the white flour, corn-
meal, salt, soda and baking powder
twice, Mix in graham flour, molas-
ses, buttermilk and raisins. Pour into
four baking powder tins, filling each
half full. Cover and steam for 3 hours.
They may be uncovered and browned
in electric oven, with top element turn-
ed on, for 5 minutes.
* * *
THE QUESTION BOX
Mrs. C. K. says: "Even if I flour
the gumdrops, they sink to the bottom
in this recipe."
Answer: Warm the fruit before dust-
ing with some of the measured flour,
and fold into batter just before pour-
ing into the pan.
Mrs, M. Mc. Asks: "What are you
using to top cakes for birthdays?"
Answer; Oh, we serve plain cakes,
However, we may suggest baking a
meringue in a pie plate that has %
an inch of water in it - then it may
be lifted off and put on cake.
* * *
,Ann Allan invites you to write to
her c/ot The Advance-Times. Send in
your questions on homemaking prob-
lems and watch this column for replies.
Cutting
YI
slown on our sweets doesn't
hurt us at all, does it? It may do
away with some "spare tires", which is
all to the good, For the occasional
sweet we can serve cake without frost-
ing, substituting half syrup for half
sugar, and in place of the frosting use
a sauce such as chocolate or honey
orange.
Today's Menu
Broiled Chops or Fish
Baked Potatoes
Peas Mixed
Foundation Cake
Chocolate or Honey Orange Sauce
Tea, Coffee or Substitute
Foundatiozi Cake
c. fat
to 1 tsp. flavoring
add vanilla. Serve hot or cold.
Honey and Orange Sauce
1, c. honey
1/4 c, grated orange peel
% c. orange juice
Vs tsp. salt
Combine ingredients and let mixture
stand over hot water, without cooking,
for about 30 minutes to blend flavors.
Can -be used over puddings, ice cream
or cake.
THE MIXING• BOWL
111, AWN AUAN
IIvdee Orme learesels*
PRODUCTION BRIGADES
MARCH ON THEIR STOMACHS ,&W
011
.s/z4s-e Hello, Homemakers! The daring
Commandos, Shock Troops of the
Allies, learn to march and fight for
days on less food than an average
production worker would consider nec-
essary to keep him going. Hard
physical training on balanced rations
of well-prepared foods in their packs
Snakes their daring expeditions pos-
Production brigades - workers on
the home front - also need to carry
their balanced rations and nourishing
food in their dinner pails. Carefully
prepared, neatly packed sandwiches,
with a bit of variety added every day
in the way of fruit or something sim-
ilar to the casserole dish, can make
every lunch-box interesting.
Sandwiches, the mainstay of the
lunch, should be made of whole grain
bread or enriched flour bread. Fill-
ings .should always be minced, flavour-
ed and slightly moistened with salad
dressing, ketchup, pickles, etc. Al-
ways include a fresh fruit or raw vege-
table, because they are refreshing,
good, and nice to bite! Be sure to add
a twist of salt to dip celery, radishes,
etc., in. Because men are still boys
at heart, add some kind of sweet to
their boxes, as well as to• the girls'-
fruit-turnover, filled cookies, a hand-
ful of raisins or a few apricots.
* * * *
LUNCH-BOX SUGGESTIONS
Meat. Loaf Sandwiches, Carrot
Sticks, Celery, Raisin Cupcake, Or-
ange, Milk.
Hard-cooked Eggs, Potato Salad,
Brown Bread and Butter, Rhubarb
Turnover, Tomato juice,
Tongue with Horseradish and Cress
Sandwiches, Oatmeal Cream Cookies,
,Hot Chicory.
Cheese and Relish Sandwiches, Bos-
ton Brown Bread, Celery, Jelly Roll,
Chocolate Milk.
Sausage Rolls, Moulded Salad, Raw
Carrot Sticks, Fruit Scones and Jelly,
Buttermilk.
Salad Green PHIL OSIFER OF
LAZY MEADOWS
By Harry J. Boyle
gleC14A_Isst_ms.
"They say spring manoeuvres are coming"
Vs
• c. syrup
• c. sugar
2 to 3 eggs
3 c. sifted softwheat flour
4 tsps. baking powder
14 to % tsp. salt
• c. milk
Cream sugar and fat together; add
flavoring and syrup gradually Stirring
until mixture is light and fluffy. Con-
tinue creaming and slowly add well
beaten egg yolks. Add sifted dry in-
gredients' and milk alternately, a little
at a time, Beat in dry ingredients,
stir in milk. The first and ilast ad-
dition should .be dry ingredients Fold
in beaten egg whites and pour batter
Into lightly greaSed pan. For layer
cake bake in moderate oven (350 de-
grees F.) for 26 minutes; for loaf cake
bake in very moderate oven (325 de-
grees F.) for 40 to 45 minutes.
Chocolate Sauce
2 sqs, chocbIate
% c. water
1 tsp. vanilla
1% c. corn syrup
% tsp. salt
Cook choa-olate and water over dir-
ect heat until thick, stirring constant-
ly. Remove from heat and slowly
add corn syrup and salt. , Boil gently
for 10 minutes, stirring all the time;
'MAKING A MOVIE"
Somebody had a bright idea about
making a movie out at Lazy Meadows.
Some perky young men in a big car
came along one day and when they
had the necessary permission they pro-
ceeded to look the •situation over. I
knew they were disappointed. All the
way up from the city they had prob-
ably been thinking about the farm es-
state they were going to visit . . • the
fine stable of hunters and saddle hors-
es , and the luxury of lying in bed
in the morning, listening to the croak-
ing frogs in the omrning and enjoyirig
those traditional brieakfasts of all
kinds of fancy foods.. . . supposed to
grace the tables of such country bar-
ons,
They eyed the sagging gate , . . and,
the old dilapidated buggy, looking as
if it had stopped one day from sheer
exhaustion and had remained ever
since in the same location. The sight
of the barn-yard and the fact that the
only way across 'the'treacherous mire
was over a slippery plank stopped
them. for some time. Finally they in-
vestigated the stable with its shaggy
cob webs stringing down from the
rough beams. They jumped with
sheer fright when Sir Timothy the red
bull in the end stall snorted with dis-
gust at sight of their peering faces
appearing through a crack at the head
LITTLE FROCKS that are at
home for general wear, for spectator
sports or for travelling are always a
find and a boon in the average ward-
robe. Here is a dress that conforms
to these specifications. It is fashioned
of silk twill in smoky beige with pearl
buttons. There is nice detail on the
rounded shoulder yoke that terminates
in a narrow band with buttons all the
way down the front.
of the stall.
Had they obeyed their own con-
sciences I am sure they would have
gone back to the city. There they
would have told their employer that
Lazy Meadows was a fable , . be-
cause it was just another farm, look-
ing possibly even more down-at-the-
heels than the others on the Ninth
Conession. They were quite gentle-
manly about' the whole affair however
and proceeded to take the pictures.
While their knowledge of the farm
was apparently very scanty, I must
confess that my knowledge of their
busineSs was also very, very small.
It had alWays seemed to me that when
people are making pictures for Holly-
wood they simply go before a camera
and let a- fellow take the pictures and
then they wait while the pictures are
being developed and afterwards go in
and see the finished thing on a screen
in a theatre. It develops that you
must pose and pose and have your face
in such a position that it gets the most
light and then you must pretend to be
natural. just try and be natural some-
time with a bunch of movie fellows
waiting to take your, picture.
Mrs. Phil took a keen delight in
twitting me about my movies, but
actually I was not a casualty. With
seeding pressing in I didn't have time
to be bothered thinking about any'
trips to Hollywood. The trouble came
with the team of bays , . Barney and
131ackie. After being rehearsed for
hours as to the correct, movie version
of how a seed-drill should be pulled
, they wouldn't go back to the older
fashioned way, They minced and
pranced and kept looking up at the
sun and I'm eertain that field will have
a crasy-quilt pattern of grain on' it
this summer,
The movie fellows are gone with
their record of life at Lazy Meadows
but I still have to contend with days
when Barnie and l3lackie start acting
. . . and it's a nuisance at seeding time
to have a team of temperamental
horses.
.0. 11,
Garden-,
Graph
Tomatoes are one of the necessary
plants whether the garden is large or
small. Whenever possible, surplus
amounts should be planted as they can
be eaten raw(cooked, canned for Wint-
er use or used as a juice, relish or
preserve. They are highly nutritious,
rich in Vitamin C.
Wite Preservers,
When making out your Marketing lists,
put vegetables-leafy, green and yellow:
.rat the top of the list. Ittiteig;l91
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Business and Professional Directory
J. W. BUSHFIELD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Money To Loan,
Office - Meyer Block, Wingham
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
it) - 3.48
Growing vitamin C in victory
gardens
Tomatoes will thrive in almost any
soil, providing they are cultivated and
given ample amounts of water. This
sun-loving plant should be planted
only in an open area.
DR. W. M. CONNELL
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phone 19
MONUMENTS at first cost
Having our factory equipped vr'"la the
most modern' machinery for the exe-
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
K. M. MacLENNAN
Veterinary Surgeon
Successor to J. M. McKague
PHONE 196
Wingham, Ontario W. A. CRAWFORD, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Located at the office of the late
Dr, J. P. Kennedy.
Phone 150 Wingham
J. H. CRAWFORD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc..
Bonds, Investments & Mortgages
Winghatri Ontario
DR. R. L. STEWART
PHYSICIAN
Telephone 29
By R. J. SCOTT
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Kte-liArtics
GLENN
CUSLI1SS
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK ,L.-u ""`"'
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
24. Bog
28. Mexican
dollar
30, Speck
31. Head of an
abbey 6. Mend 32. Newly
7. Card game marries
9. Near the tip women
10. yawned 34. Gull-like
12. /nacribed bird
pillar 36. Picked out
14. Stumble 37. Hautboys
18. Article 39. Emissaries
19. Savage 49. Pilfer
21. Distress 46. Fluid of the
signal liver
ACROSS
1. A. blow
4. Viscous
liquid
7. Enclosure
8. Region
10. Entire
range
11. Natives of
Lapland
13. Affirm
15. Island in a
river
16. Greek letter
3.7. Vent
20. Half ems
22. Not
exaggerated
23. rate
25. By means of
26. Pretzel).
article
27. Plant juice
29. Insane
31. Jewish
mentb
Expose to .
znbisttire
35. Out of otidl
Mind
88, Wind
instrumente
41. Cistern
42. Wild sheep
43, Behold
44, Poem
45, 13,1te gently
48, Doctrine
51. Weariea
52. Celestial
body
58. Clothed
54. Pig pen
55. Bxcianitt.
Doti
DOWN
L tutta
2, Chills tied
t SOW
3. Gasoline
4. Dancer's
cymbals
5. Constella-
tion
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ANINAAts 61
4itt Zoo
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.
J. ALVIN FOX
Licensed Drugless PractitiOner
CHIROPRACTIC DRUGLESS
THERAPY RADIONIC
EQUIPMENT
Hours by Apiointment.
Phone 191 Wingham
•
HARRY FRYFOGLE
Licensed Embalmer and
Funeral Director
Furniture and
Funeral Service
Ambulance terVice.
Phones: Day 109W. Night 109j 47. Cry as an
ass
49. Pevottr
50. Attempt For Life Insurance
and Pension Plans
consult
GEORGE R. MASON
representative
Canada Life Assurance Co.
THOMAS CELLS
AUCTIONEER
REAL ESTATE SOLD
A Thorough knowledge of Farm
Stock,
Phone 231, Wingham
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