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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1940-05-16, Page 7By Kathsrine Baker Or Souse you can have a cake with- out frosting,: hut it will loam ttolf it* ehaarm, r1',h'a frosting is important be- - cause it 441414 1 the' eske of and giir an added flavor. Besides, most ake- .wafers really enjoy frosting a Bake ==-=it gives ahem axi opportunity to achieve all sortsoaf fancy e#cets in swirls, peaks, designs or just i a smooth, shiny • 1,iah. The cake should the cola and free from loosecrumbs before. treating, " It should be. on a level surfa""ce and the frosting should be done. quickly!. Frost sides of ea'ke 'first -spreading lightly down from top. edge: ' „ 'Thea. 111 in cebtre top and work out t o •'edge., mak- Log ' swirls or folds with a silver *Poon 1 ° or ..atula, r here is 4 selection of chocolate frostings Which' will add glamor Y la to our cakes. • , Bittersweet = weeL Choeo Frosting Ei ht squares uflsweete ed: chocolate rg One cup sugar Cu 2/3 water / P Melt chocolate in double iler.•' Bring sugar and water to a., boll.Cool until lukewarm. , Addgr ivali Itechocolate, ► stirring until ,bleinded. ool, stirring. e . 'ocCasi n ll . • ; Makes Salle enough far sting ..p pa..y. tw. 9-inV11 ' to ver o ant81"8o b t*h t'Q t - k .8x8 -inch o ' 1a rtops of �iw .$...$ h �ca es r ye s, or t p o o , `: about two dozen cup ca es. r This "frosting is, espei tally suitaab • fo>t< 'white ...�..__....at, pla: n:ealtes— I'itgimete ' rl - .desire,use °7,1%e ps suga), l s Moths Creole Frost 1/8 +,Soup '.butter. , i f C ioners u �r zeuPa,'•sifted Con e t • ,gad U ,teaspoon vanilla x4 teaspoon salt 1 square unsweetene . chocol , pelted I/3 cup strong coffee Cabo ) Cream butter thoroughly; a part of sugar gradually,blendinga ter each g addition, ,Add; vanilla, salt,' a ' d ehoeo- late, and mix welt. Add renlailing augur, alternately with coffee, until at right consistency to spread. Beat after each addition until smooth. Make* enough frosting to •cover tops and side of i.svo o -inch layers, or top and sides of 80x2 -melt cake (generously), or about three dozen Sup rakes of medium size. ( AWAround rouuud Chocolate Frobthtg r 4 tablespoons _Vatter 3 ti'Ups sifted confectioners' sugar % teaspoon. vanilla 3 1rT,oee unsweetened hotened hoeolaate,'melted 4(about) ales teaaspuon,sait Cream butter well t add part of sugar gradually, blending after each addition. Add vanilla, salt, "and ehoeolate, and mix well. Add xenainig Sugar, alter-, nately , with milk,. until of ; right con- sistency to -spread, beating after ;each addition until .mixture is, smooth. Makes enough frosting to eover topet and -sides of two 9 -inch layers, or 'top. •and . sides of 818x2 -inch• take (gener- ously)-,•or about three doze.: cup owes; This frostingand other butter freste Inge of :similarwhich hold their 8 type, shape, are often used, for decorating cakes. To make flowers or special motifs, fore° through pastry tube or beg, lilting tube or bag only , a -full h 1tC of frosting, At a time. al Bar a n Special , . EXCURSION'+ TO ALL STATIONS IN WESTERN CANADA GOING DATES ,' DAILY 1VYAY 18 TO 29, 1940 RETURN LIIVIIT : 45 datys.. - u . - TICKETS GOOD ' TO TRAVEL • " • IN COACHES - Excuarsion .;; tieliets ` good` in Tour7ist, Parlor and. ,Standard sleeping : cars also available on. payments - of Slightly higher. passage fares, ' plus' price of parlor or sleeping- ea • 0 accommodation. , �w.b R• OUT1aS-4kke s good going vi (Port Arthur, Ont., • Chicago, Ill., or • - • Sault, Ste. Marie; returning " , via sarme route and line only. Generous 'optimal ronxtingfs.' ` „STOPOVERS wil'1'•be allowed at any pointint Canada on the going or . rebornptrip, or' both,.: within final. limit .of ticket, on , application to' Conductor; Also at Chicago, Ill., Sault Ste. Marie, : Mich., - and west, in accordance with tariffs of United States lines. run ',particulars from any " argent.~., Canadian . Pacific SPINACH WITH SPAGHETTI ✓ Package milk sPa h et ti.eoSh e d un- til tender . 2..cups' grated old cheese' 2e cooked ups C o cd,spinach 1 cup milk 3 tablespoons butter - 1' tablespoon, flour , 1/ teaspoon salt 'teaspoon pepper * a " Paprika and buttered crumbs Place the ,pooked spaghetti' in a but- tered. uttered. baking: dish and cover it with half .the-grated-�cheese„ Put the chopped spinach over the- cheese. Make' a sauce,. 'of the milk, butter, Sour and seasonings and pour it over the spinach. 'Sprinkle the ,remaining. grated cheese on, the sauce.. ,Sprinkle with buttered e ruin!bs and then a bit of pa»rikaoBake in a . moderate oven 35O° for thirty minutes. Serve Immediately garnished with parsley. ,., . s `-- Nested. R�ec�P e NEW`- •IDEAS FOR dim ,-VEGETABLES' - , Par: too often -. the• best. part .of .vege-` tables is drained flavour as m�e besty and the' parrt means v ra. necessary to'a'healthful eliet. '•-. It is ,advisable "to " ctioky egetables. with very (littler watea; ',Or by', such methos as_ baking, steaming or escal.. `lapin .C1 ;All food`Value is then retained. - AtIll s time of year' when vegetables such as eabbage, carrots, turnips, On -- ions, beets and potatoes have been in storage, , ey often need a ` 1ittle fuss- ing up t make therm. more attractive. 'Rhe fella ing recipes have been tested by the Henke Econontist of, --the Gon- er -tree Section,' Marketing Set - (Vice, D partment of Agriculture . , • Hot Cabbage .Salad: . 4 I cups shredded cabbage, - 1 reup watery- tery . . • I. /teas (on. salt 4 tablespoons butter • 4_ tablespoons vinegar .2 tablespoons 'flour :Cook cabbage in a-. closely covered saucepan in boiling' ,salted water . six minutes. Drain. In another pan melt butter, add flour and stir until smooth. Add hot water from cooked cabbage, .then vinegar. cook three minutes. Add cabbage. f . - ' Onion Upside Down Cake This is particularly good'with .' roast beef) - 3 -cups' onions. 2 cups flour Legg 2x/2 teaspoons 'baking powder .fin enp. milk ,r. . C1�VPa1int1Jpt READ''t FOR THE 3'OYOUS SPRING:' The winter is now afading memory of cold. days and piles of snow. • Spring means warmth and sunshine, so paint your home, 'your furniture, or your fence, with our "ready -to -use Wats: It ,•pays to keep you. property .well• painted. • A U'LCAFT PAINT is one of the best on the market. It sinks :rightinto the wood and -its cheap. All oolorii. H B1ack-stone " TRE BROADWAY OF GODERIOW' p`urnitvixe _ . Mattresses r. Stoves. Confectioner' lee' Cream Tobaccos ----11/4 deliver ' W Phone 249 ., THE Q000111011 SIGN1►LATLs Last Day" Came and Went- 4SUUtheWrId Remai11Cd 4 'tehloaP usi a botteal 1s Peel toad Aloe ethos obs baking pen, Dot with tory butter. Sift *our .tad Beat egg, Add milk and table. spoons .lite/ted shortening. Stir Imo kuru Pouroveronratns arid bake. I powwow r . sled ranw atter cups g pot 1 egg -2 tablespoons sett, bread 'erun ba Salt Beaat;•egg. Add bread eruwbs, Salt. and ;potatoes, Saute on hat greased griddle, allowing one tablespoon of3 batter for,eaeb pancake. Parsley C* 4 cups shredded earrete I' tablespoon .minced.. parsley ears boiling water °tablespoons butter Cook earrots in boiling Walter . 15 .minute.. Keep closely covered. Re- move cover and add butter. Cook alive minutes. .Add 'parafle and' serve, Tomsfr'ead=Chi nth d slices bread ' ebieese .Salt and poper 2 eggs 2 +pups eanne 1 tomatoes' A, littl0 ni n, e i 1 Cul; bread .n cubes. Coarsely grate cheese, ; Beat eggs.' Add totnetoes. and seasonings. . Arrange broad and cheese In., alternate layers, Pour ligoid over and bake fortyaave minutes • at ala° ,Serve a'<t' once - 1311 cups grated carrots 1 egg cup _ ground, can t s cup milk 2•' tablespoons butter - A. little ;Onion• tl .. Spepper Salt p It and e . Beat eggs well. Add milk and other 'ingredients. Press into a greased`bak ing dish.' Bake three-quarter .hour at 3500 F. rServe hot or sliced cold on lettuce, Give IIim Time We like the -yarn that -a Southern acquaintance tells about an old colored man . named Uilele Abner, Uncle Ab- ner had been very iuuch occupied all by himself in a. cornear of his Cabin neat the fireplace, HelI d been working'in- dustriousnly With a stub of a pencil and a piece of paper. ;Suddenly he looked up, a joyful expression On his wrinkled face. "Doggone," he shouted, • "et I. ain't learned to write." ° "Uncle Abner's lifemiaite, Aunt Mellissa, hurried across the .room, and 'looked wonderingly at the''scraarwled lines on the,papex.~ `"Bless my- soul, man, you • clone -have learned to,write !" slie exclaimed, :"What do ,it say?" don't. know," Uncle Abner replied. ",I ain't leaned to 'read yet.' —By Hank in St !Thomas Tinier -Jour- anal: By W. N. JokaPromstan hal L sid en Free One 'Saturday morning in May, 1875, I arrived in Atwood, at that thin 1►nown as Newry Station, eu route from Luekuow to Donegal, where I was to learn cheer.niakiug. tJ toy way out about a mile east of Newry. I met a, Middle-aged. woman 'trying to dead a lusty calf. 'whether I stayed to help her on her. way' or not I. do not remember now, but I know I should have done so, for of all the provoking jobs on a farm tld, is one of the mostdifficult unless thi deader has a strong auan'>t strength and can Pull' the calf after him, and even then the stubborn little fellow Will'; sometimes lie down` and brace his feet; , against any Obstruction in 'the way, '1,1or this poor woman it Was an her euleat task. as' that calf jerked her over the knolls and into the hollows on the .roadsi'de and, yes, sometimes into the roudholes ,on the wet •clay road. , 'Wh 'n I told , the story •a -: Donegal they said, -"Olv, that was : most likely Mrs. 1}--e. Tiley are aterialists and sold lltheir stock 1a' y a when. th e y ry world '. t n ht thed as c in o an the arco fit` end.", The year before au naaned Brown . a e- cw ieosn as a preacher be +,n :began to teach. that the` -world` was ° -comin - to an end n a R.. Aril 74. e a'Cer i stn. Th A to tl 1.3 'faithful were to be caught up into the heavensrv-while the earth was being puri - fed byfire. Atter this they were to be returned to the earth, where - they were to.live in a sort of Elysian bliss. In a short time ,he had a large.•following who implicitly believed i,iat his teachings. There was probably' xbucli that was' good in his. early sermons, but as he developed his doctrines he was still able to hold the people and led them to make many 'sacrifices,. As all ma- terial things were. to be destroyed by dire in., the •purification process he ad- vised the farmers tosell them, includ- ing their• livestock, deposit the proceeds with him and he promised to send all money'. entrusted to- his care to be de- posited in ' a huge; fire proof vault in Washington, 'D.O., where- it 'would be kept safely tor -them. • With what amounts he was trusted no one l ev'-and when it'was-rt1t-over there 'were few who would talk to "out- siders about the crazy abut,- to sgme,. the plausible plan:of a sincere man. `"`-`*There were '"surae doubters • ' evert-- among the`•elect.-.'One wealthy farmer had, intended to build a new house in 1874 .but decided, to;wpit until I$' rld explained his decision, in these words : "Nell, I suppose the people- will -laugh Ott, xere for not, building this year, but l shall wait unto .matt year anyway." .hail wait lie fliti. ,Hut events began to move rapidly incl ihe, supposed last day . *pproafched, A great union meeting was' planned for Listowel, with two services. case in the afternoon and the other at night, Dur. ins the i1rat, Mr. Brown toldbl* con- gregation - that -he still believed It wO the appointed day for the egtd tot 911 thing* and in the night iherviee he elaalutecl that be had gone over the pro. pbeeies once more and he found iw rea.- son• to ehaxige his mind. (Midnight was the hour set for the translation and we can ,visualize the suspense of some, the ecstasy of Others and the doubtful viewsof a few Who sat back in the turners near the floor. What•they all thought as the minutes and •halt'«,hours' passed' by after 12 o'clock we cannot tell, but many wire loath to leave for • home and, in fact, did not until the morning. • They were a sad 'and dejected -looking company', who drove hone mth el limber •wa g. gons during the early morning hours, -'dad and wiser probably,'•they kept their own • counsel, but clung to the new doe - ;trines they had imbibed and remained, separate from other religious' societies in ; many individual .eases for several Years._ , iiff14 16-hI tsZ thine us -r vival a number fanatical„incien ts: occurred.. One may be taken- as, an 11 f an 1 .. I s told o e a ust>'ati�nn t WA one man, , Government official, that, believing lie could iiy away from. this mundane' sphere, be wrapped an ordinary sheet around , lilinself, climbed to "the roof' and started, but lauded on, the ground; .Stiffening no bad effects, he tried It a second time, but, falling once more, be broke one of his arms. That 'was his last trial at transmigration of his body, [r. Brown made -his exit as quietly as possible and o, far as I know "ne'er ell weer was• hearthoofG after. good` people, were in Many cases iflnan- Cully crippled, but .apparently without a murmur they settled down to making good :their losses, ' kind neighbors helped with -the,gift: t4 ..Calf, a sheep, a little pig, of : few hens, ete., and the breaches Lax the communities were heard, " ' In a-negro-sehooi there was one bby so black`- that even, the wither pupil.. called him - "Midnight." , All :went well until `another pupil, came to the :school "who. -was .only : few,shades lighhter, than. "Midnight." •00,..being called his, nieklaame, "Midnight," by . the new. liupil;•the Malek oneanswered•;-"listen,' heath; you don't. call me 'Midnight.' 'You's about half -past .eleven yo'self." 'The following Shaws the month of the wheat .harvest in the wheabg row- iang sections of the world. Wheat Iz harvested every aaioiafh of the year somewhere in the world. January. Argentina, "Uruguay, Chile and Australia. February -4 U r BgYPt "andSouthern India 1?Fe (end of harvest in Southern Ilemis-, here and beginning of hair in p , bei , �� Northern , ar h--- t' *Egypt, Tripoli, Morocco end India. April --w Persia Meso ta bi is ,>,• Pa ini$, -Axa . a, Liumlyria, .Cyprus. and Mexico. 3,1/4Y7-4 Algeria, Tnnis, Central and Southern Asia,- South Carolina, Georgie, i a barna and Louisiana, I 1 to r y, tiPai>l, I"o fugal; Greece, Tuxes key, South of Prance, North Carolina, •Georgia, • Arkansas, Texas, Virginia, Indiana, Illinois Kentucky, Tenn s, )0e;' Oklahoma, Missouri and Kansas; 1ala- ei Wont* Austria,: Mu*. it Bulgaria, Xeris-Crestriflovesee 11110111k Swlt eriatoll, god itstatt!4 ern Gersten/1i IOWA i tawMA„ *Hi York, reap lv, OW, Ii*, Il�lix►pial, ifehigitn, Atisoeuri, Nei busks, Kansas and orsgos. August--; ifoutliern Canada, Kul tit,'G Kingdom, ' G 'tat , lent, Denmark, 'liimmisete, Dakota, South Dakota, Montan .ate , Washington. September -id .. Norway, Siberia Northern, Sweden at Russia,Canadar for th Dakota, l tana •, S n lan�I N`orwalt . *lqorthevat Russia, Northern Canada, .0 e n dest kartn$Y t e r n woof. phere and beginning of 'harvest Southern). Novem e r Peru andlath a South Africa. December— • Bu:raaaa and -Argentina, AWN 11111)WEIS SHAPEr'ITED Have your Iambi Mower, sharpened onthe mast modern machine on - ;the market It ".COi#ts ' llf1. more , t4 have it One' . the... right way All work when promised. . . NEW LAWN MOWERS LLat prices that will surprise you. TOOLS At, We have a new shipmentofSpades, Roes, Rakes, Forks F orke anc�' . T ChPPerTreat yourself to some new garden tools, A deal that' Is cone-cl eared, does not clinker and is very low in -ash. tiSE .}Font) CORE:, A Cake that.is very popular and very high in heart 110E,— utaits. Our four -pointed treated POCAHON'I'AS. This grade of Coal bas become 'very populaar, i7sE LL The ltd Jacket . Domestic Coal. for your range, heater, furnace or boiler. Gast in Boal yard, 18.00 per ten, or $8.16 deliver: 1n Goderich: FOR PLEMBINC1, BEATING AND IIARDWAKE.-Thil coatinn and N' UWARE STORM" At the Rabe notes—Store 22 Rouse 11 , What Makes RED INDIAN'Better : The pump measures only gallons' . .. it tells you how much fuel is going into your tank. But there are other important measurements of gasoline value besides quaintity.• There is Octane Rating, for one, which determines anti -knock quality, and •wwliiclat, in the ;new: Red Indian Gasoline, puts its value way up. There's Vidaaility .too,:which„nan't be, measured or rated, bot.which; in Red Indiani, is so high it ensures quick starting,casy,,even' firing and flashing pick-up all the time Of course it costs more to make Itgase line with these extra measures of value,, but tlieylre all it► the new Red Indian and it stall sells at the regular price! s. In step with the most,'up-to"»date develonq.ents in .gasoline refining, •• McColl-Irontenac now.introduces RED INDIAN A NEW' NON= PREMIUM GASOLINE - with volatility .e and anti -knock qualities heretofore obtainable only i>Ulit. gasolinps sold at a higher paCice.: You have to try RJ t) IND : ;iN GA8+FJLINE tt �-believe that a non. preacitduiu motor fuel can give such smooth power ,-- such easy atattirig, d so many miles per gallon. without knock or. "ping". With RED INDrAN - you'll feel the difference in the first mile .. , and fro; there on, for