The Wingham Advance-Times, 1942-10-01, Page 6If Your Child
Catches
Cold listen-
OS
PENETRATES to upper
." breathing passages
• with soothing me- 11 dicinal vapors.
It STIMULATES chest and ¤ back surfaces like a
N.,,,warming poultice.
TO "MG RELIEF ••••*
WORKS FOR HOURS to ease coughs, relieve
muscular soreness or tightness, and
bringreal,honest-to-goodnesscomfort.
To get this improved treatment . . .
just massage VapoRub for 3 minutes
ON BACK as well as
throat and chest, For Better Results
then spread thick
layer on chest and VICKS
cover with warmed V VApoRua
cloth. Try it: The Improved Way
two later, when the tree has, become
established, the stab should be cut off
close to the main trunk. This cut will
heal over quickly.
--listen to millions of experienced
mothers and relieve miseries with the
IMPROVED Vicks treatment that takes
only 3 minutes and makes good old
Vicks VapoRub give BETTER THAN EVER
RESULTS/ IT ACTS 2 WAYS
AT ONCE to bring relief.
vieNs AT ONCE
444444 1,1111118111W
Household
Hints
By MRS. MARY MORTON
NMI
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
3, Cuckoplike 20. A Mark"
birds 21. Tie
4. Tiny 22. Bird of prey
5. Amasses 24. Round body
and conceals 26. High
6. Tapestry 27. Chin
7. Snip whiskers
8. Custodians 28. Came in
9. Prize for 29, Tax
excellence 30, Like an
11. Heavy ogre
hammer 31. Riches
15. Cooling 33. Summoned
instruments 35. Incorrect
17, Female 38. Shell for
student ice cream
27 2e, "7 29 ll
31 30
3'l
32 X35
55
37 36
1 2 5 ' ...p5 6 7 a
vi
36
9, •
a4.4
MILtrilirl WE:1111M
LIMN I;JMOki
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UONUM MMDE1g1
MUM DM MOO
MUURIM
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39. In this place
40. Send forth
42. Vein of a leaf
4
ACROSS
1. Nail
5. Cut irregu-
larly
9. French river
20. Voided
escutcheons
12. Weird
13. Satellite of
Uranus
14, Marries
1 15. Frozen
16. Land
measure
1.7. Bounders
18. Editor
(abbr.)
19. Tatters f
'22. Unit of
work
23. Flat-botton1
boats
24. Foundation
Z. Conjunction
126. Label
1
27. To stoop
29, Fat used in
soap
132, Finish 1
133. School
134. Close to
.35. A season
!U. Sun god
81. Remember
39. Part of foot
41. laughable
42. Send back,
as Money
43, Meaning •
44, People. of
Ireland
45. Peat
46, rerninine
battle
DOWN
',
reeling, 2. Nobleman
PRAIRIE Dog
is A. Rovr.wr
ictr.
mAxlm
i.rrviwoFF-R.4.1551A
STATES MAN-•
19 GALLED
"PA PA514 An
(1.111-4.E PAPA)
BY VrAl.iN
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PL/44ED
'A DAMA.K11. ci(lEft
'orotv113 nio
A Autox VIC'T'IM
vo(om DEcakSED
wrrti 4115 OW),1 +(MO
,WHEN ALIVE - AFRICA
Po You i(AVE
OPPoVIEH-(„WilEti
SKA -,4ow BOXU•td ?
Flo
this autumn."
The board chairman said the board
was considering establishment of ceil-
ing prices on livestock, He said it was,
believed the existing shortage could.
be overcome if it was realized cattle
prices could not be expected to rise
this season.
Wife Preservers
Tea is usually made with one extra teal
spoon "for he pot." As a wartime meas.
ure, omit that extra spoonful. -Each
spoonful saved in this way will extend the'
tea supply.
J. ALVIN FOX
Licensed Drugless Practitioner
CHIROPRACTIC DRUGLESS
THERAPY - RAbIONIC
EQUIPMENT
Hollis, by Appointment.
Phone 191 Wingham
DR. W. M. CONNELL
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phone 19
J. W. BUSHFIELD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Money To Loan.
Office - Meyer Block, Wingham
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 'et Mortgages
Wingham • Ontario
HARRY FRYFOGLE
Licensed Embalmer and
Funeral Director
Furniture and
Funeral Service
Ambulance Service.
Phones: Day 109W. Night 109J
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.
IMUGGS AND SKEETER
if IS 'PE5-WEE'5" BRO-TI-4ER
HOME FpRL.OL361-1
r -
tali =nu tr,==
4C=" 14.3
leer, Inset', 4140
4e110*$.4
4‘ ,444444..(
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By WALLY BISHOP
PAGE SIX WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES Thursday, October Ise„, 194Z,
comma.,••••••11100101•111110,
Make the most of your Tea..
Plum and Apple Jam
(Requested).
3 qts, plums, 6 tart green apples,
water, granulated sugar,
Wash and cut plums; wash, quart-
er and peel apples. Combine plums
and apples together and barely cover
with water. Cook until fruit is soft,
Measure fruit 'and add sugar. in the
proportion of 1 cup of fruit to % cup
sugar. Bring to a boil with - electric
element turned to "High" and cook for
about 18 minutes or until jam is jelly-
like in consistency. Pour into sterile
jars and seal.
If plum stones are stubborn to re-
move, leave them in until fruit is cook-
ed. They will come to the top and
may easily be removed before sugar is
added,
TAKE A TIP
1. Remind everyone in your house-
hold to use drugs sparingly; screw
tops on tightly; use each bottle to the
last drop; store in a cool place; place
r ut"'
I Hints On
Fashions
U.
to the waist with small covered but-
tons on a narrow band. The skirt is
slim with a few gathers at the centre
front.
seeds or herbs in bottles and seal,
tightly.
2, Heat only as much water as you
are likely to require-to prevent ex-
cessive heat in your kitchen and to
save electricity,
3, Do not wash fresh fruit if it is
to be stored in the refrigerator for a
few days; just pick it over and store
in a dish without a cover,
71.14 QUESTION P DX
Mrs, B, B. asks: "How can a paste
glue spot be removed from a green
dress and a rust stain caused by an
ornament on a biege felt hat?"'
Answer: If the green dress is wash-
able, soak in warm water; let dry;
sponge with weak vinegar and laun-
der. (Test on a piece of seam to see
if color is fast.) If dress is non-wash-,
able, sponge with carbon tetrachloride,
The beige hat should be taken to
an expert cleaner if the spot is large.
Iron rust soap must be purchased and
used according to directions. A fresh
stain may be sprinkled with salt and
rubbed with lemon juice.
Miss J. H. asks: "How do you sug-
gest that we take care of ,zippers-can
they be fixed?"
Answer: Slide them carefully and
evenly. After taking off a garment,
hang it on a hanger and close the zip-
per. When pressing a garment, close
the slide fastener. They can rarely
be fixed, but always take to the store
and ask anyway,
Anne Allan invites you to write to
her c/o The. Advance-Times, Send
in your questions on homemaking
problems and watch this column for
replies,
Garden-
Graph
Fruit trees should be pruned when
they are dormant-which is after the
leaves have fallen and before new
growth starts in the Spring.
Fruit trees frequently develop V-
crotch trunks. This should be remed-
ied by pruning, otherwise just as soon
as the trees become heavy with fruit,
the weaker of the trunks is apt to
crack or break off during wind storms.
This damage may also happen during
the winter when the tree is heavy with
ice.
Strong fruit trees for victory
gardens
As illustrated in the Garden-Graph,
one method of pruning is to shorten
one of the trunks, leaving it to form
a branch while the other trunk grows
on, becoming the main trunk. Anoth-
er way is to cut one of the trunks
leaving only a stub. A year or
5COTT'S SCRAP BOOK
The eggplant is one of the most at-
tractive of the vegetables in its natural
state. Artists of still life like to com-
bine it with other fruits and veget-
ables for its rich color. It has a bland
flavor, so there are many who do not
cage particularly .for it as an addition
to the' menu, It is served scalloped
or stuffed and baked, hut for those
who do not care for it cooked thus, it
May be French fried and served crisp
and brown.
Today's Menu
Broiled Pork Steak
Baked Potatoes
Scalloped, Baked or French Fried
Eggplant,
cabbage and Tomato Salad
Apple Pie Tea
.Scalloped Eggplant
2 cups ,cubed 2 tbsps, minced
eggplant green pepper
1 c, tomato. 1 tbsp. minced
• puree onion
Butter, salt, pepper
Peel and cut eggplant into cubes,
and put into greased baking dish with
green pepper, onion and tomato, puree,'
Sprinkle with salt and pepper, dot
with .butter, cover and bake in 350
degree oven about 30 minutes, until
eggplant is tender, removing - cover
during last part of cooking to brown.
Baked Stuffed Eggplant
1 medium- Ya cup bread
sized eggplant - crumbs
1 tbsp. minced 1/2 cup grated
onion cheese
3 tbsps, chopped 3 tbsp, tomato
green pepper ° catsup
tbsps. fat Additional
% tsp. salt bread crumbs
Cut off stem' of eggplant, put in
large kettle of boiling water and boil
15 minutes. Take from water and cut
in half. Remove pulp, leaving shell %
inch thick. Prepare stuffing by cook-
ing onion and pepper in melted fat for
5 minutes, stirring frequently. .Add to
pulp, Add bread crumbs, grated
cheese and catsup. Season cooked
mixture -well and pack lightly into
eggplant halves. Sprinkle additional
bread crumbs on top, set pan in mod-
erate oven (350 degrees F.) until
heated through and browned, about
20 minutes.
French Fried Eggplant
1 eggplant 1/2 c. milk
1 egg tsp, salt
2 tbsps, Boar Pepper
Hot Fat
Peel eggplant and cut into oblongs
2 inches long, Y2 inoh wide, 14 inch
thick. Dip into batter made of other
ingredients, excepting fat. Drop into
deep hot fat and fry until brown.
Drain on, soft paper"' and serve hot.
FALL FAIRS
Chesley Oct. 2 - 3
Dundalk ..... Sept. 29-30
Dungannon ...... Oct. - 2
Fordwich Oct. 2 - 3
Teeswater Oct. 6 - 7
Atwood Oct. 9-10
MEAT RATIONING
BEING CONSIDERED
Declares Price Fixing Will Insure
Orderly Marketing Of Cattle
Donald Gordon, chairman of .the
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. 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.
Canadians are not a race of veget-
arians. But if we can't buy meat as
we have been used to do, some adjust-
ment will have to be made. Some .
communities have already felt _the'
pinch of the meat shortage, If yours
hasn't felt it yet it will soon, So start
thinking about it now,
Men and women on tough jobs need
meat. Meat is such a tissue builder
and ti-ssue replacer. No substitute for
such people is "just as good", There-
fare if you have a dock hand in your
home, a farm hand, a war worker in
munitions plant who is doing hard
physical labour, give him or her what
meat you can get.
Remember that the housewife has
a tough job, a difficult job, but she
does not burn up the protein calories
that a shipbuilder does, House-wives,
people working at sedentary jobs,
nearly all children, can get their pro-
tein requirements from milk, cheese,
eggs, beans and nuts. For a limited
period that is absolutely true. Over
an extended period it remains com-
parativPly true. Let your war worker
on a strenuous physical job, have the
meat. He needs it.
Of course, we all need meat, Ber-
natd Shaw to the contrary. So some-
times when you can get it, give the
Wartime Prices and Trade Board,
in a statement Sunday night on the
existing "acute" shortage of beef, said
the board was considering further
action and added consumer ration-
ing and allocation of`.supplies might
be necessary to ensure fair distribu-
tion,
"The situation with respect to the
supply of beef and other fresh meat in
the domestic market may require
further action by the board along lines
similar to those already announced in
the United States," said Mr. Gordon's
statement issued by the board.
"These would include allocation of
supplies and consumer rationing. The
board is also studying methods of es-
tablishing ceilings on the prices of
livestock in addition to the present
ceilings on the prices of meat. Cattle
prices at present are substantially
higher' than the appropriate seasonal
level and must be expected to decline
whole faintly a treat, • Meat pie, where
the meat is supplemented by well
cooked vegetables and covered with a.
flaky pastry crust goes much farther -
than the same meat cooked by itself.
Try rolling sausages in pastry crust'
and baking them, two will take the•
place of four.
And here's a tip we're ship-
ping hams and bacon to Great Britain
who needs them desperately. Did you,.
know that that leaves us with a trem,
endous surplus of pork liver . and kid-
ney? So instead of ordering a ham,
why not make a pork kidney pie, It
is• actually much more nutritious than
the ham you can't have.
And here's; a recipe for liver • loaf
that your family will like even if they
think they can't eat liver,
Liver Loaf
1 lb, pork liver 14 cup tomatoes or-
2 cups bread crumbs vegetable juice.
1 medium onion 1 tsp, salt
Put liver through the meat grinder.
Add bread crumbs, onion, tomato and
salt. Put in greased baking dish and-
place in pan containing warm water. •
Bake slowly 30 to 40 minutes,
Send a post card request to the
Health League of 'Canada, 111 Avenue
Road, for our free up to date Vitamin
Chart.
THE MIXING BOWL
Ow AI NS ASSAM
NOB* Nome aseaosalet
FIGHTIN' FOODS
Hello Homemakers! As a worker
in the home line of defense, isn't ,it
your job to plan Nutri-thrift menus?
Of course, making plans is only half
the battle-if you abuse cooking prin-
ciples, you lose the fight,
"Fightin' Food" is baked to con-
serve vitamins and minerals without
changing flavour or appearance. Given
good recipes, make sure your baking
action is right. Here are some tips
to ensure success:
1. Make accuracy your password.
People who consistently turn out
good foods are not lucky, they are
.accurate.
2. Good judgment is the next essen-
tial. It's nice to have available every-
thing you want, but one seldom has,
and good judgment will make the best
possible use of what you have.
3. Certainty that a dish is good be-
before it is served is a frne' point.
Tastes differ and we are saving on
saigar, so a nibble would satisfy you
that everyone would be happy. Ap-
pearance is important-"eye-appeal"
food really helps keep up morale at
the table.
NUTRI-THRIFT MENU
Cereal with Raisins, Bran Muffins,
Honey, Coffee or Milk.
Mock Drumsticks, Green Beans-
Shredded Lettuce, Berry Puidng.
Vegetable Omelette, Shredded
Greens with Russian Dressing, Cup
Cakes with French, Fruit.
Bran Muffins
1 cup flour, tsp. soda, 1 tsp. salt, 2
cups bran, 1 cup milk, % cup molas-
ses, 1 egg, well beaten (if desired).
Mix and sift flour, soda and salt.
Add other ingredients. Bake in but-
tered muffin tins 30 to 40 minutes in
electric bven at 3750 . Makes 18 muf-
fins.
Mock Drumsticks
11,4 lbs. meat (beef or veal), 2 cups
:cornflakes, 2 eggs, 1 tsp. salt, 4. cup
water.
Cut meat into six or seven oblong-
shaped pieces. Roll and fasten with
Skewers. Roll in ;cornflake crumbs,
then into beaten eggs and again in
crumbs. Brown in melted fat in hot
frying pan. Add '4 cup water, cover
and bake in electric oven at 350° for
..455 minutes.
Note: Bake complete meal in oven,
cutting potatoes and, beans in small
pieces. Place potatoes around meat;
Ouse hot water for beans and pudding
-so that each dish will be cooked in the
given time.
Becoming Wool Dress For Fall
Black splashed with a bit of vivid
color is popular in the new sartorial
scheme. For instance, this black
wool, frock is brightened by a yoke
top and sleeves of bright cyclamen
and chartreuse, The small stand-up
Collar is half cyclamen and half char- back,
treuse to correspond. The front closes
K. M. MacLENNAN
Veterinary Surgeon
Office-Victoria St., West.
Formerly the Hayden residence.
PHONE 196
Wingham, Ontario
MONUMENTS at first cost
Having our factory equipped with the
most modern machinery for the exe.
cution of high-class work, we ask you
to see the largest display of mone.
merits 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
Revon,11.1110.4,,,Whe
By R. J. SCOTT
Business and Professional Directory