HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1942-07-02, Page 6PAGE SIX
DIE MIXING BOWL
O f ANN MLA*
*On IMIP•sOlibe
Desserts Your "Demolition Squad"
Will Attack
Hello Homemakers! The happy
ending of the meal will be according
to the first course. A heavy meal
should be followed by some simple
dessert--- a gelatine pudding or an
ice. A light meal may be followed
by a richer dessert - ice cream,
-mousse, refrigerator pie or cake,
On searing summer days, smooth-
textured frozen or chilled desserts are
tempting and delicious - grand for
Iceeping up family morale. In the
tested recipes below, economy has
been considered. Don't forget to pre-
pare your desserts in the cool of the
day and then just store them in your
electric refrigerator until time to serve.
* * * *
NUTRI-THRIFT MENU
Fresh Strawberries
Cream of Wheat Porridge
Toast Jelly Coffee or Milk
Thyme Breast of Veal
Potatoes - Spinach
Whole Wheat Bread, Refrigerator
Cookies, Sustard Ice Cream
Dairy Ring Salad Spice Muffins
Cherry Shortcake Milk
* * *
Custard Ice Cream
11A cups milk, 2 tbs. flour, %
cup sugar, 2 egg yolks, 1 cup
whipping cream, 2 .egg whites,
1 tsp. vanilla, 14 tsp .salt.
lifix flour and sugar thoroughly.
Add cold milk and stir until a smooth
paste. Cook until thick. When
thickened, cook over hot water for 10
=Ins, Remove from element and pour
over slightly beaten egg yolks. Re-
turn to electric range and cook 2 min.
Cool. Fold in beaten egg whites, then
whipped cream. • Pour in freezing
tray and freeze in electric refrigerator.
* * *
Old Fashioned Fruit Shortcake
2 cups flour, 4 tsp. baking pow-
der, % tsp, salt, 1 tb. sugar, 14
cup fat, cup milk, butter, fresh
fruit.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients and
work in the fat with fingers. Gradu-
ally add enough milk to make a soft
'slough. Toss the dough onto a flour-
ed board and roll to one-half inch
thickness, Make a large circle for a
pan shortcake or in muffin tins. Bake
in an electric oven at 450 degrees-
12 mins. Split in 2 parts, butter and
put crushed sweetened fruit between
layer and on top.
* * * *
TAKE A TIP
Know the meaning?
1. Mask-to cover foods with a
glaze, frosting or mayonnaise.
2. Macedoine-a mixture of vege-
tables cut to the same size.
2. Lace-to add a dash of this and
that to a beverage.
4. Julienne - vegetables cut in
match-like strips.
5. Gratin or au gratin - foods cov-
ered with buttered crumbs and usually
cheese, baked in a casserole.
6, Thyme breat of veal * sprinkle
thymne (a herb similar to sage) over
the veal and then roast,
* *
THE QUESTION BOX
Mrs. C. N. asks: Recipe for Javelle
Water.
00000
Garden-
Graph
While cueuitibers are not an import-
ant vegetable, a few vines can be in-
cluded where space permits, Any
fruits not used for salads can be made
into relishes or pickled for winter use,
410111100W1IMUMMINIMMIMM miMIMM1111
KEEP SEWING
MACHINE IN GOOD
CONDITION
No more sewing machines for home
use will be manufactured while there
is acute need for metals for war, the
Department of Munitions and Supply
has ruled.
When those now in process of
manufacture and stocks on hand are
disposed.of there will be nothing else
to do but make those available give
the longest service possible. Permits
will be granted for making essential
repair parts, but extra care may often
eliminate this procedure,
Take care of your sewing machine
needles. To avoid breaking, see that
the presser foot or attachments are
securely fastened by the thumb screw.
A large needle and thread to corres-
pond should be used on heavy work.
Avoid pulling material when stitching
to 'avoid bending the needle and thus
rendering it useless. The machine
feeds the work without assistance.
If the machine runs hard after
standing idle for some time, use a lit-
tle kerosene in the oiling places, run
the machine rapidly, then wipe clean
SCOTT'S SCRAP Etgs
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Moja% dlool
43. Acrots
44. Bird's abode
J. ALVIN FOX
Licensed Drugless Practitioner
CHIROPRACTIC DRUGLESS
THERAPY - RADIONIC
EQUIPMENT
Hours by Appointment.
Phone 191 Wingham
•
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13
..9UT AFTER Illt,poN'T
-rAKt rr OFF THE, FRONT
ftoRcH UNTIL SISTER •
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WINGITAM ADVANCE-TIMES Thorscla.y, July Znd.,,, 194Z.;
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmo1mmmmmmMMBIIM
long time. She bp.s trained many of
her younger set in the arts of combin-
ing pleasure with serious business •
when on a mouse-Mutt but she has al-
ways managed to retain her own set
of wiles in being able to get around
a person by rubbing up against your
leg and then by purring manage to
get practically whatever she wanted.
That is she managed this until her
rival .came. along in the form of one of
her own children , Spotty.
What Spotty lacked in diplomacy
and shrewdness she made up in sheer
nerve, Lying on the verandah appar-
ently not paying any attention to what,
Was going on, she would bolt for the
kitchen door and scoot in at every •
opportunity. Try and 'find her and she
Would be no place to be seen, Then
when the hunt bad quietened down she
would come tripping out froM under
the sofa or the stove or from behind
the woodbox or possibly out of the
washroom. Brazenly she would slip
and slide on the linoleum and play and.
manage to get Patricia Ann interested
in her , knowing that this was in
itself almost a victory because the wee
lass has her own captivating ways of
getting what she wants.
Spotty vanished from the picture they tell us
one day. She was nowhere to be fights for her youn g.
found on the farm it seemed. Tabby Open warfare has been raging ever
was heartened by this stroke of Fate since. Tabby waits until Spotty has-
and went back to her old tricks of to go out looking for a meal and then
sidling into the stall where you were she slips in to get at the kittens. Spot-
milking to get her share. . . and of
preening herself outside the kitchen
door on the hope that she would be
invited • inside. It seemed strange that
Spotty should have abdicated just at
the time when her influence was be-
ginning to bear fruit.
On the way to the stable one day
I heard a terrific racket in the mow
over the sheep-pen. It seemed as if
some fiend was torturing babies. Going
up to investigate I found that Spotty
had blossomed into matronhood with
a batch of seven kittens and Tabby
having found them was determined on
'destroying them. The attraction of
grand-kittens for a grandmother cat
was entirely lost on the jealous Tabby,
Spotty was fighting back in the way
Answer.: This has been mailed dir-
petty to your address Mrs, C. N. We
suggest that bleaching be done by
hanging clothes in sunshine out of•
doors during summer. Wei also re-
mind you to rinse the clothes twice
after the bleach is used.
Mrs, R. C. asks: Recipe for Butter-
scotch Bread,
Answer:
Butterscotch Bread
1 egg, % op brown sugar,' cop
corn syrup, 2 tbs, melted butter,
1 cup sour milk, 2 cups bread
flour, 2 tsp, baking powder,
tsp. baking soda, 1,Ss tsp. salt, V.
cup chopped nuts. •
Add sugar, syrup, milk and melted
butter, to well-beaten egg. Stir in
sifted dry ingredients, add nuts. Pour
into large loaf pan Bake 50 minutes
at 350 degrees F.
*
Anne Allan invites you to write to
her c/o The Advance-Times Send in
your questions on homemaking prob-
lems and watch this column for re-
plies.
Futter
Nutmeg
tsp, salt
Heat milk, sugar and salt, Stir hot
milk slowly into the lightly beaten
eggs; add vanilla. Pour mixture into
custard .cups add a bit of butter to
each, and sprinkle lightly with nutmeg,
Bake in a moderate oven. (304 deg, F.)
on a rack in a pan of water until the
custards are set, When the point of
a thin knife comes out ,clean, the cust-
ard is done and should be removed at
once from the hot water to keep it
-frcirn cooking too much. Serve either
hot or cold.
Orange Nut Bread
1 c. chopped nuts
% c. orange marmalade
2% cps, sifted flour
1%, tsps. salt
1 tbsp, 'baking powder
1 c. milk
eggs, beaten
and oil, Veep well oiled at all points
indicated in the instructions that come
with the
See that the belt ..has the correct
tension, This should be only enough
to keep the belt from slipping,
•
VEAL IS 'PLENTIFUL.
AND ADDS VARIETY
4y staying at
HOTELS
Montreal
Toronto
and the
LORD
ELGIN
i Ottawa
tad
s2p
per person, g•
No hi g her! Jet
400 lovely rooms with radio!
Most of the veal on the Canadian
market comes fiom calves of dairy
herds and is usually plentiful at this
time of year. It lends itself to a var-
iety of dishes, hot aerd cold,
Contrary to a widely held opinion,
searing does not keep in meat juices.
It does give brown colour in beef,
pork and lamb, but veal should not
be seared because of the surface be-
coming dry and unpalatable,
Here is a suggested menu with veal
for the meat dish:
Roast Shoulder of Veal
Mashed Potatoes
Whole Wheat Bread
Brown Gravy
Spinach
Red Currant Jelly
Strawberry Tarts
Stuffed Shoulder of Veal
Have bone 'removed from a 5-lb,
shoulder of veal. Wipe with a damp
cloth. Fill the cavity with bread. or
potato stuffing. Roll and tie in place.
Place .on a rack in roasting pan and
roast in a moderately slow oven 325F
to 350 F.), Allow 25 to 35 minutes to
the pound. This roast should be bas-
ted several times in cooking. If there
is not sufficient fat in the pan baste
with melted fat. Yield 6 to 3 servings.
is low as
so high.,
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P01 AMP Si
FOWL weir
101.1101111StO.
mairroia 2
2 tbsps, melted butter or other
fat
Sift together dry ingredients and
add nuts. Add milk and eggs and stir
just until moistened. Stir in orange
marmalade and fat, and pour into
well-greased bread pan. Bake in mod-
erate oven (350 deg. F.) for about 1
hour ,or until lightly browned. If you
prefer shredded orange rind cooked in
a syrup may be used in place of 1
orange up to cup of thinly shred-
ded rind. Cover rind with water and
cook for 20 minutes, then drain. Make
syrup oft cup sugar and 14 cup of
water, co k add rind and cook, with
very little stirring, until about 2 table-
spoons of syrup are left; cool before
adding to bread mixture.
Orange Nog
1 c. water
1 c. irradiated evaporated milk
1 tbsp, sugar
1 c. orange juice
2 tsps grated orange rind
Chopped ice
Measure water, milk and sugar into
shaker or fruit jar. Shake well with
ice, Add orange juice and rind and
shake vigorously. If orange juice is
very sour, more sweetening may be
needed. Serves 4, makes 1% pints.
t Sturdy cucumbers in triclory
, 'gardens,
Cucumbers are heavy feeders and
placing, one or two shovels of manure
in the bottom of each hill. works
wonders. To plant the seed, form a
circular hill about one foot wide and
put four inches of soil over the man-
ure. Plant the seeds a half-inch deep,
10 or -12 in each hill,
As illustrated in the Garden-Graph,
after the young plants are well along
they should be thinned, leaving only
four of the sturdiest plants.
For the early small varieties, have
the hills four feet apart each way. For
the large late cucumbers place the
hills farther apart; four by six feet is
usually ample,
rm.."'"""
Milli On that a mother of the jungle''
• Fashions
ty never goes very far and at the first
whimper from her brood she is back
battling.
The question is . . . what are we
to do? If we destroy the kittens it
will mean giving in to .Tabby . . .
and if we let them grow there will be
so many cats around Lazy Meadows
we won't know what to do with them
all. PHIL OSIFER OF
LAZY MEADOWS
.111 m llllllllllll ................
Household
1
I
Hints
By MRS. MARX MORTON
mut
Keep the rules of healthful diet
firmly in mind when planning your
daily menu. If the children do not
like milk well enough to drink their
quart a day straight, slip it to them
in the painless way-in ice cream or
puddings.
By Harry J. Boyle
We have been having trouble lately
with the cat family at Lazy Meadows.
Tabby was the acknowledged mistress
of the entire place but in her haste
in producing offspring she left -us with
a cute black and white kitten which
managed to escape the usual "rock in
a bag" fate of so many of her kin-
folk.
Spotty developed into a wholesome,
playful creature, soon occupying the
place of honor around the house,
Patricia Ann developed a liking for
the little creature with the result that
Spotty was able to sit on the inside
of the window sill while Tabby nurs-
ed her whiskers in glum discontent on
the outside.
Tabby has been ruler of the Lazy
Meadows mousing tribe for a long,
K. M. MacLENNAN
Veterinary Surgeon
Successor to J. M. McKagne
PHONE 196
Wingham, -:- Ontario
Wife Preservers v.,1101•••••••••••
MONUMENTS at first cost
Having our factory equipped with the
most modern machinery for the exe-
cution of high-cIass work, we ask you
to see the largest display
i
of monu-
ments of any retail factory n 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-
Today's Menu
Breakfast
Fruit Juice
Ready-to-eat Cereal Milk
Bacon
Whole Wheat or Enriched Flour
White Bread Toast
Jelly Coffee Milk
Luncheon or Supper
Toasted Cheese Sandwiches
Green Peas
Cabbage Orange Salad
Baked Custard
Tea
Dinner
Roast Veal Roasted Potatoes
Spinach Mixed Vege"table Salad
Orange Nut Bread Butter
Orange Nog
Baked Custard
4 to 6 eggs
1 qt. milk
6 tbsps. sugar; maple syrup or
honey
% tsp. vanilla
A versatile outfit that looks as well
in the sun on the beach as it does at
night is surely a good choice for light
packing. Here's this type ensemble,
a smart affair in jersey. The dress
has a simple fitted bodice of jersey
with narrow shoulders straps. It can
be worn with various types of jackets
to dress it up or down. The one illu-
strated is of cerise and white broad
striped linen-weave cotton with white
collar and cuffs and flower buttons.
To prevent fails in your home, polka) floors with a minimum of wax, and rub down thoroughly so that no soft, slippery' wax remaina under the hard anetaa. •
usiness 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
J. W. BUSHFIELD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Money To Loan.
Office - Meyer Block, Wingliani
DR. W. M. CONNELL
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phone 19
J. H. CRAWFORD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc..
Bonds, Investments & Mortgages
Wingham Ontario
11.00111••••=1•0001=1,1111111,0111•101.a...1•••
W. A. CRAWFORD, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Located at the office of the late
Dr. J. P. Kennedy.
Phone 150 Wingham
DR. R. L. STEWART
PHYSICIAN
Telephone 29
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
t ACROSS 6. Thin
1[1: Talk 7. Masculine
5. Snow tame
, vehicle 8. Disavow
Feminine 10. Misty spa
name ih sky
11. Cubic meter 11. Fashions
12. Tidal flood 15. Swedish
13, Retinue Coin
14. Resplen• 17. Muffler
dency 18. Weird
16. Sullen 19. Unable to
it Cod of eatth see
20. Shelter 21. Waterway
21. Lump of 22, Fruit
coal
24. Part of
Greek
temple
26, Rock
28. Melody'
29. Cuckoos
BO. Pruit peels
82', Century
plant
83. Nourished
U. Metal
23. Harass
25. Youth
27. A witch
31. Platforms
32. Capers
35. Tavern
37. Pillars
38. Thong of
leather
39. Trust
40. Silkworm
41. Serene
42. Shake. c
spearean-
character
HARRY FRYFOGLE
Licensed Embalmer and
F uneral Director
Furniture and
Funeral Serilce
Ambulance Service.
Phones: Day 109W. Night 1093
A. H. McTAVISH, B.A.
Teeswater, Ontario
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public
and Conveyancer
Office: Gof ton House, Wroxeter
every Thursday afternoon 1.30 to
4.30 and by appointment.
Phone --- Teeswater 120J.
THOMAS FELLS
AUCTIONEER
REAL ESTATE. SOLD
A Thorough knowledge of Farm
Stock.
Phone 231, Wingham
For Life Insurance
and Pension Plans
consult
GEORGE R. MASON
representative
Canada Life Assurance Co.,
Frederick A. Parker
OSTEOPATH
Offices: Centre St., Winghant
Osteopathic and Electric Treat-
ments. Foot Technique..
Phone 2/2. Wingham.
5 b 7 S
7
I
044
22 23 ,,47 1 19 /13D
/-/s UGCS AND SKEETER 86. Permit'
31. Gasps
39. Act Of ao.
knowledging
45. Rub but
46. I: ire
47. Sings
cheerfully
it& Wise meta
so. Sweet
pottittie3 1
00.14arbOr
I
t NAVI4
Head C6014 '
2. restore to
health
2, Seaweed
3. Wander Ai
V1/4/Akt•rr -ro SPEAK "lam
You Aeou-r ONE, OF THOSE
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