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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1943-02-18, Page 6PAQU fix Thursday, February WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES 194 ....WwwwwwwewwwwwWwwwwwwwwWwW01.• Prune Pudding 2 cups dry' bread crumbs, 1 cup milk, % cup sugar, 1 cup chop-: Ded prunes (or dried apples), Vs cup melted butter, 2 eggs beaten, salt. Add bread crumbs to hot milk and set aside to cool. When cool add all other ingredients and pour into greas- ed baking dish. Bake approximately 1 hour in .350° oven or steam -about 1 hour in well-cooker of -electric range, * TAKE A TIP; 1. Heat rolls or muffins in the top of your double-boiler and save time and electricity, This method freshens the 'product, 2, When we make a chocolate cake or cookies; we stir a little of the sugar (one-fourth cup) in the pan in which we have melted the chocolate. The sugar gathers' up all the rest of the chocolate and saves just that much, 3. You can make twice as much meringue if you add a teaspoon of water for each white, while you are beating it: Lenion juice instead of water gives an unusual flavour. 'K collarless neckline and the front. The sleeves are finished with, similar trim- ming that ends in a jaunty tassel. The seamed detail is broken 'by slit pock- ets. WAR WORXER'S DESSERT flore's Real Relief for NOSES ..THAT CLOG, DRY UP AFTER DARK . Household Hints Sow much better you f eel - wnen you clear nose of transient conges- tion at bedtime with Va-tiro-noll Va-tro-nol does 3 imPortant things; (1) shrinks swollen membranes; (2) soothes irritation; (3) helps flush na- sal passages, clearing clogging mucus, relieving transient congestion. It makes breathing easier, invites sleep, Zia cold threat- ens, Va-tro-nol used at first sniffle or sneeze hes VICKS-% Prevent colds de-VATRO-NOL veloping, 02"FIllierISE IMP MEDICINE 'By MRS, MARY MORTON 4 HEALTH 1.,Z.ZIGUE OF CANA Eli .kien Using plenty of vegetables and the unrationed cuts. is the .answer to meat rationing. The English have learned. that trick, Braised Liver with Vegetables 1- lb, beef liver, sliced thin 11/ cup mixed vegetables 1 large onion, fried 1 cup tomatoes 2 tablespoons drippings V.?. teaspoon salt Pepper Put liver into shallow pan. Fry onions in drippings until golden brown and pour over liver, add other vege- tables and seasonings, Put in hot oven (400 or 425 degrees F,) until meat is nicely browned, then lOwer fire and bake 1 hour. Serves -6. Meat Pie 3/2 lb, beef, veal, lamb or lean pork 4 medium sized potatoes 6 carrots • 2 small turnips 4 medium sized onions Tomatoes if you like Gravy or meat stock Cut meat in-small pieces, cover with hot water and cook until tender, sea- soning nicely, Or you can brown the meat before cooking, if you wish. Pour meat and vegetables, the latter diced, sliced or cut into small pieces and cooked separately, into balding dish and mix all together,- season and pour in meat stock or gravy, see that all is seasoned well, and clover with pie crust or baking powder biscuits. Bake at 400- degrees F.' until biscuits are done, 1 cup buttermilk or thick milk 1 tsp, of baking soda 1 tsp, salt 1 tsp, cinnamon tsps, nutmeg, cloves and pastry spice tsp, of vanilla To make thick milk (if you can't get buttermilk), put 1 teaspoon of vinegar in 1 cup of whole milk and let it sit in a warm Place until it sours and thickens, Method: 1. Dissolve the soda in the sour milk. ' 2. Mix all the other ingredients in the top of a double boiler. If you can't get raisins or currants use peel, 3. Add the milk to the mixture and stir until smooth. 4. Cook over boiling water 'for one hour. Serve with cream kr sauce. This will serve'4 to 6 people. A post card request to the Health League of Canada, 111 Avenue_ Roard, Toronto, will bring you a free copy of our up-to-date Vitmin Chart. OATMEAL IN A NEW ROLE Wartime shortages and restrictions bid fair to give oatmeal the place it really deserves in the Canadian diet. This humble cereal is always highly recommended by nutritionists for its i valuable content of iron and the B vitamins. There is and will be no shortage of oatmeal in this country and it Should become a staple food in every Canadian home. It can be used in many ways and should not be thought •ii;)£ solely as a breakfast cereal, Oat- meal porridge every day might not be regarded with favour. Why not try an oatmeal pudding on one of your meatless days? It is delicious; nour- ishing and has good "staying" qualities. Here is a recipe that is easy to make. Children and grown-ups both will like it. Simple Fruit Pudding 1 cup quick cooking oats 1 cup raisins or currants -2 tbsps, brown sugar or honey Hints On Fashions , • M. Honey-Nut Rennet-Custard 1 rennet tablet 1 tablespoon cold water 1 pint milk, not canned 3 tablespoons honey 14 . cup pecans Chop pecans and divide among dessert glasses', Crush and dissolve rennet tablet in cold water in a cup. Add honey to milk and warm slow, ly, stirring constantly, to be sure honey blends with* milk. Test a drop on inside of wrist frequently_ When COMFORTABLY WARM (110° 17,), not hot, remove at once froin. heat. Add dissolved rennet• tablet and, stir qtickly for a few- secondS only. Pour at once, while- still liquid, over the nuts. Do not. move until firm - about 10 min- utes. Chill. • Just before serving top with Honey Whip Topping. Honey Whip Topping: Combine 1 stiffly beaten egg white and 1 tablespoon strained honey (1 to 3. tablespoons honey may be used) and whip with egg beater until fluffy. Serve on top of rennet- custards. . Frost cup cakes on top and sides with a quick fudge frosting. While frosting is still soft, press an animal cracker into the top of each cake. Makes 4 or 5 servings. "A woman's place is in the home - after the whistle blows at the airplane factory." This is the Wartime version of the old saying: Today, mother and sister are welding, inspecting, sorting, pack- ing, mailing, driving and painting. Time clocks and closing whistles have taken on a new meaning. We are at War and this time the women are at war too. And yet, we must have good food, well-cooked food, tasty food and nutritious food. This is essential, Busy as mother is, she must live up to the nutrition program. Dad needs energy food; mother needs proteins to rebuild those much-used muscles; the children need health- ful milk; vitamins and minerals - - war or no war. Here is a recipe for a tasty dessert that may be made in the morning and placed in the refriger- ator for the evening meal. Or it may be made in a jiffy after any work "shift" and taken from the refrigerator by any member of the family, at any time when a "war meal" is ascheduled. It's a light despiert, but tasty and very nutritious: THE QUESTION BOX Mrs. D. 13, asks: "Do you grind liver before or after parboiling for liver loaf? Please send recipe;" Answer; ' Liver Loaf 11/2 lbs. pork liver (ground after parboiling), y2 lb. ground beef (rather fat), 1 cup hot water, 34 cup bread or cracker crumbs, 1 egg beaten, 1 tsp. salt, 14 tsp. sage, 1 onion minced. Melt 1 tb. • fat in frying pan and add onion, liver and beef. Brown thor- oughly. Pour hot water over crumbs and mix all ingredients together. Shape into loaf and bake in a greased. pan for 35 minutes in electric oven at 350°. Halves of onions or potatoes may be baked in the same pan. * * Ann 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 plies. NUTRI-THRIFT MEALS Savoury Baked Beans, (Moulded Beet Salad), Steamed Apple Pudding. Vegetable Soup, (Grated Carrot Sal- ad), Bread Puddling. London Style Lamb, Steamed Po- tatoes, (Grated Cabbage and Horse-. radish), Carrot Pudding. Meat Balls and Brown Potatoes, (Grated Turnip Salad), Prune Pud- ding. Spaghetti with Tomatoes, (Celery and Apple Salad), Roly Poly Pudding, Puddings are steamed above the "one step" meal. Bracket foods are prepared and chilled in electric refrigerator. All menus may include whole wheat rolls or biscuits or "Canada approved" bread, and milk for the beverage. * 'K * * RECIPES Spaghetti and Tomatoes 3 cups spaghetti (uncooked), 5 cups canned tomatoes, 1% cups grated cheese, Vs tsp. cayenne, % tsp. salt. Combine ingredients and place in the well-cooker of electric range. Cook On High until steam comes act- ively from the vent, about 30 minutes. Allow to continue cooking for 1 hour on Low, Total cooking time 11/2 hours. (Amount-about 6 to 8 serv- ings.) Meat Balls 1 lb. hamburger, % cup cooked rice, 1 medium sized onion (chop- ped .fine), 1 medium green pepper (chopped fine), 1 egg, 1/1 cup milk, salt. Combine ingredients and shape into balls. Place in the well-cooker of electric range. Brown well. -Add 2 cups of stewed tomatoes. Cover. Cook on High for approximately 20 minutes or until steam conies from vent. Con- tinue cooking on Low for approxim- ately 1 hour. TM MIXING BOWL Or AMC WAX. Piper *sew leseeeeshe "ONE STEP" MEALS SAVE TIME AND ENERGY Hello Homemakers! Tackling a job cheerfully makes -it easier, doesn't it? Now that you want to reduce kitchen time to a minimum, your meal-getting will be simpler if you make good use of your well-cooker or Dutch oven, A friend tells us when, she has put Aier whole meal into her well-cooker, she feels so good she does a one-step all around the kitchen. She is free for war work or anything else. Yes, it's easy and it's economical. Just make sure your meals are "nutri- lion-checked" and the family is sure to feel right because the food will be' Cooked right. Here's the correct use of the switches for the well-cooker: (1) "High" for browning meats, bring- ing foods to the steaming point and baking, (2) "Medium" for sterilizing, :and (3) "Low" for maintaining the steaming point after steam appears at vent, for soup cookery, for cooking dried vegetables and fruits. CHEMISTRY HIRED MAN ON THE FARM Chemists. have joined with the farmer to rid his crops and young plants of destructive insect's through the use of insecticides and fungicides. The frttit farmer and orchardist have reason to be thankful to the agricul- tural cheMist for the discovery of a spray that permits heavy fruit to re- main on the tree 'until ripe for pick- ing instead of being at the mercy of wind, rain and hail. The article also points out that not only is chemistry aiding the farmer to raise bigger and better crops but is also pointing the way, through the new science called chemurgy, td the cultivation of specialized crops that will be of prime importance in supOly- ing many of the new raw materlaW required by industry. Chemistry has changed agriculture, modified farming amid revolutionized 1A-oductive methods, accordiny to an article entitled "New Acres" by John R.obitaille in the C-I-L Oval. The article shows that chemistry comes in- to the farmer's picture even before the planting of seed through use of the scientific testing of soil, the recom. mendation of special types of fertil- izers for specialized crops, Seed disin- fecting and seed treatment to destroy spores of animal and vegetable para- sites, SAIJn1/M.IES Tough Irate Mother: GoodnesS me! It's half an hour since I sent you round' to the shop to get things, and here you are back without them." Little Dick; It was such a long queue before my turn that I forgot what it was you wanted. Irate Mother: Then why didn't you come home and find out? Little Dick: I was afraid if I left I'd lose my turn. 4114.11 gEDECOReto ELL-• LA.s,t My WOE. rr Clever trimming and the use of self fabric characterizes many. of the new clothes designed for spring wear, clothes that seem to be smarter than ever before since their subscription to government regulations. The use of wool fabric being under- government regulation; 'has, spurred designers to brilliant trimming touches. Here is this new looking coat for general wear, fashioned of beige woollen with. fabric used in a rope effect to trim the high, Business and Professional Directory Wife Preservers. MONUMENTS at first cost Having our factory equipped with the most modern machinery for the exe• cution of high-class work, we ask yot to see the largest display of moral• 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 era' agents' and middleman profits bg seeing us. E. J. Skelton & Son at West End Bridge-WALKERTO/i 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 H. C. MacLean Insurance Agency Wingham. J. W. BUSHFIELD Barrister, Solicitor,. Notary, Etc. Money To Loan. Office - Meyer Block, Wingham DR. W. M. CONNELL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON K. M. MacLENNAN Veterinary Surgeon Office-Victoria St., West. Formerly the Hayden residence. PHONE 196 Wingham, Ontario Phone 19 A sheet ironed always from selvage to selvage tends to get wider and.shorter, Alternate your method pf ironing and orolotur service of sheet. W. A. CRAWFORD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Located at the office of the late Dr. J. P. Kennedy. Phone 150 Wingham wwwwwwwwwwwww6 J. H. CRAWFORD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.. Bonds, Investments & Mortgages Wingham Ontario DR. R. L. STEWART PHYSICIAN Telephone 29' SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK , By R. i. SCOTT CROSSWORD PUZZLE HUM -razinvi3cinca,.„ • SHEDS 'ne075--- .1315115113131Ea 1321:1 raiDECIMMD DEIW INIMM MMUM MOM BID UMW Elm© ma EICIC113 1312101 1211:111101111312 HBO 012M131710E1 1303®13 IpL9E 7..mitmaut ©rug L1. 0121f.31R A M 5. Conjunction 27. Mix 6. Wine 29. Malt receptacle beverage 7. Shaving 31. To be in implement debt 8, Jewish 35. Speck month 36. Bddy of • 9. To comb water 10. Metric 39. Perform measure 41. Dirties 18. Mingle 42. Candle 19. Tramp 43. Hindustani 20. Conclude 44. Fathers _ 21, Moan 48. Mexican 22. Eagle's nest dollar 23. Bright light 47. Tidy 25. Conscious 48. Herd of 26. Commence whales ACROSS ?, City in Florida 6. Betel palm It. Decorate 12. Cheek bone 13. Black and blue 14. Sky-blue 15 Everting sun god 16. Ancient 17. Live coal ;i:1. Choking bit 24. Electrified particle 35. warp-yarn 28. Make less tense 30. A pin Verbal 33. Carry on, Eta war 54. Ventilated 26. Finch 37. Born 38. Poem sk 40. Finish 41. Ermine 43. Japanese shrub 45. Likely 4S. Seeds 5(i. Musical drama 62. Muddle 53. Exudation from pines 64. Untidy 55. Form of ectoa HARRY FRYFOGLE Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director Furniture and Funeral Service Ambulance Service. Phones: Day 109W. Night 1091 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 I- Teeswater 1301 J. ALVIN FOX Licensed Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS THERAPY - RADIONIC EQUIPMENT Hours by Appointment. Phone 191 • Winghon 49, Marshal of, Fr' .ce 50. Sphere 51. Prescription term Frederick A. Parker OSTEOPATH Offices: Centre St., Wingham Osteopathic and Electric Treat- ments. Foot Technique. Phone 272. Wingham. THOMAS FELLS AUCTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD A Thorough Knowledge of Farm Stock. Phone 2311 Wingham For Life, Insurance and Pension Plans consult GEORGE R. MASON representative Canada Life Assurance Co. 3 4 2 le 5 a 9 7 -Mutt .6. sfmt)A veLigii-t Me sm. fop. BAP- or sii.VE.P.? 12 Lc:444e BONE. oi lilE tin M AA bony is-ilk FEMUR oR coca; FROM TiLF. KORAN 1N ,k ILkftiER. CASE. 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