The Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-08-14, Page 7THURSDAY, AUGUST 14th, 1041.
LlgItuiug Writes
THE Gmay*flE +Rs'II SI?k-.ANA STAR,.
.Yi BRITAIN—KEEP - •
EES' ' Y*A.R'LING HENS
Many poultrymen matte a practice of
marketing 611 'their yearling hens'.by
the time the pullets start ter lay.
It has been demonstrati many times
that good yearling liens can be •brought
back to profitable, productiolt..':after• a
short rest following their moult, At
• the present time, in order to send all
the'Canad'itin ;ggs"rcgnired by Britain,
• the objectkve is; to havea full hen
house on -every farm. By retaining all
;the good yearling hens this Objective
,will be more readily ,attained. With
proper care and proper feed, -healthy,
vigorous Yearling hens' can , be pro-
: fitable producers.
i<'oiiltrymen are advised 'to -cull their
yearling hens with the idea of retaining
bird capable of- 'prrofitable--production'
through the fall aivd winter months:
Only those birds Which are obviously
• done as *layers should be nulled out
and marketed. A
Arrangements .should •be made to
house yearlings and } pullets separately.
Older .birds always -pick on younger
birds and egg production. suffers.
Where it is not possible to house them
separately it may be possible to sell
good yearlings to neighbors who have
extra housing space,- at meat prices.
'• •AGWLED
Ragweed, the cause of eighty-five per
eent. of hay fever cases in Ontario, is
'now in flower and should be cut before
it goes to seed, advises John' D. ,Mae-
iLeed, Crops, Seeds and Weeds Branch,
�• Ontario Department- of Agriculture,
Toronto. '
'RagWeed, prevalent in Southern On-
-- tario for some years, is gradually
estabiishtng' tse i -n_ Northern--Ontar.
and may. be found in waste places;
y
a
vegetable gardens, hoed crops, and . n
grain fields, usually after the crop has
been removed,.. This weed is. an an'
meal The stem is much branched and
Slightly. hairy, from one to three feet
1 high. • •
p •
The leaves arefinely divided, the
]ower surface being of a lighter ,green
than the upper. • It produces male and
. _ female Sowers in different. -heads on
`the •same plant..• The male flowers are
Yellowish. on long, slender spikes at
''the '•ends of •the • branches," -and the
',._f -f1)3 ale. flowers are inconspicuous,
g
reeni,h two- or three together. The
.seed is dark" brown and about three-
- sixteenths of an inch long. They have
great vitality • and will retain this }•
vitality] in'the soil fdi9m:any _ years.
An average plant will produce 5,000;
seeds. Th"tts it can be seep that, the
Pr
i
ecentian of seed production is most
'important if this menace to health is.
to he , controlled.
'N unmistakable '`V" was
burned into the lawn' at the
Canadian Ford plant at Windsor;
enteric hen a lightning bolt
struck a sprinkler, outlet. . This
symbolic happening occurred the
same • day the company decided to
place the• "V for Victory" sign
on wall shipping cases containing
military equipment which go out
from the plant. Above, Mr.
°Wallace R. Campbell, president,`'
Ford Motor • Company of Canada,•
Limited, examines ;the strange
mark. He adds a "Thumbs Up"
gesture; for the plant he directs
has supplied more than 90,000
vehicles to Empire armies.
The SIS -down
Uiidei the heading "Hitting Canada
Below the 'Belt," The. Labor `�1tIew,
organ of the Canadian rederation of
Labor, has the following:
After the display( of contempt .-.and
defiance f eom the ca'canlny coal miners
of (Cape Breton' and the peremptory
demands from__ _ shell, workers-- o
Hamilton, neither the Government ,nor
the .people of .Canada should; have any
doubt as to the attitude of these 'C.I.0.
;coups toward's' the national emerg-
ency. Like their . affiliates in the
'Uxtited1 States, -they see in the war -time
letter market the conditions of a boom,
othing. more. (Perhaps °some in-
dividuals among them do see more—
see a chance to help the enemy—but
one i''ould' like to believe that these are
This 'vigorous plant occupies much,
-••.--.etrac r' --ane '-t,e-riously:_ __ r1er'reasae , crop i
_ `yie-1r1 . It ' is most olijeeti0niili1E in
- pasture fields and fodder•, as it rices
a peeulier odor to the milk -of cows
that eat it. The seed isalso difiicult
Orr•-remme-ef-'nm---cl•oversesee l- -
When 'found in pastures, grain fields_
ate; roadsides. ragweed should be cut
as close to the -ground as possible be -
'fore blossom:: are well developed. This
eel: pri�vent fi>rmation of _polled and
seed. A second Cntttin; should i►e, given
ii, September °4 r •October, • After
harvest cultivation will prove effective
ore ,stnbble fields. .
• Spraying is also. effective. Write
'the Crops, Seeds and Weeds TBrench,-
()ntario Department of 'Agriculture,'
Toronto, for special ragweed pamphlet,
• NILE
NILE, Aug. 1`2.-1Tr. .Geo. Feagan
has started' three ing operations
(ironed 'Nice with a new tractor , on
. trial.
Miss,,elhirley McOra•tten has goe'to
Delhi • to work for. a while. ,
Mrs. Alex. ' Sillib had a successful
last week. Good pricer`' were
realized.
Mr. A, IV. Young has been laid up
for ;I •WePIc, blit at time of writing he
is somewhat impri►ved.
can;i(18. is 'the most pepnlar of all
outside ootfntries hrthe ('�:S.A., says
L. S. 13. Shapiro in "ESa�turday Night."
No ?merican politician seeking public
i•11pport dare''say ti word against Can-
` • mala, To the people°of the iiepubli_ this
c�►untry is ',in• the sante class with the I
Bible, the t'nion 1111( Hickey Roone'y."
•
RuptureTroues Wed -
°j
(
Thousands healed by our- adbaticed method. No
lei tsttals. no elaetle, no plasters-. No pre.,,iure on
etre or spine. Tlexo' pad. Different from all
others. ndOrsed by doctors, mechanic.? clerics,
by here. Very light. INEXPEf1S1VE.
IIUAnAfITEED. Write for InfOrniatlo[I and trial
SMITH MANUFACTURING -COMPANY
Established 1193 Dent. 119 Preston, Ont.
Check Dischargcs
From the- Bowels
Dowel troubles, although .happen-
ing at any time of the year, are
more prevalent:during the hot stun -
mer and early fall months.
:Bummer Phi is one • of the worst
troubles,. but diarrhoea, dysentery,
colic, cralnps and_pains in the in-
testines, or any looseness of the
bowels Ahbuld have immediate at-
tention. .
The action. of Dr. Fowler's Extract
of wild l trawwberrryy pis ORURO:141
rapid, reliable' and a cetual• in hely- ',•
ing to' elteck thou unnatural dirk
charges.
It hat'been. on the market for the
past '94 years, box why • experiment
. with now and wlttied remecuest
Get 's fir. b'ow1er'd'' and feel maf ..
The T. )4itbtute (1 ., !at&, I'oroMei Ost
•
few. Jl'ost of • these workers have bot
all their schooling in unionism from the
but 0.1.0. They have learnt the technic
of extortion from- the niawter tacticians
who introduced the stay -in strike, and
they have broved themselves starch :apt
pupils that -they can, on occasions talk
,.
hack: -to -.their tuts -=-As they have lot-
terly been doing When 'John k,. 'Lewis
mildly advised slow -downers to resume
digging coal.
The' -hold-up of war work in Cape
Breton is °the more reprehensible in
'that it has been carried out deliberate-
ly and with full -knowledge •'of the
a
directr '
and indirect canseq,uenc'es:.liore-
oier, it is these 'C.'I;O• miners' method
of saying `Thank you" to the peopl` of
(Canada who for long years have taxed
the ms el v s . to_ s,il• ssidi _t'iie cb•a.l.- in-
dustry and' to save the men's.. jobs.
The Dominion Treasury has handed
out $2,900,000 a year in peau time to
defray •part of the cost of_ carring
Nova Scotia cool' to 'market in the
central provinces. • The transaction
was net economically justifiable, for
there is plenty of coal more . readily;
available. Itebrought no benefit to t'1e
mine o%!liers, - the Dominion Steel &
Coal (`ompany, o at least not to .the
point of enabling that firm to make a
-prof -it.._ And the --only possible et`euse
for continuing the subsidy was that
-the mine output might be useful for
the navy and for -emergency transport
Strike
if war should'. come.
War has..copie. It has been with' us
for nearly two years. (3ut. just when
the Canadian people might have" ex-
pected some return from the bread
they had. cast' upon the' 'veatersseafter
'Manly days, the ,Cape Breton miners
began • to redouble .their frequent
strikes. Dozens -of short, local strikes
occurred: Any pretext was good
enough for a work stoppage. One
strike was called in protest against
the decision= of the: --referee--- n a ball
game. Then last April the slow -down
was begun, in. -protest against 'a work-
ing agreement which the miners said
had been signed by; the union without
their, approval—though- it was their
own union. •to which " the3• were still
plying dues through the check -off.
Their grievance was against the union,
they took • their,_ reprisals ago Inst
i i'iana The CI.O.'s United States]
'Mine Workers'' 'Union has acaxnonished
..its unruly members and expelled' a few
of •the ringleaders, but the Cane 'Breton
slow -downers have not`"forgotten :What
the: C.I:O. has itself taught them.
In• main the 1Governiilent, last June,
declared by order -in -council that coal
mines were "essential services" under
the Defence of . Canada Regulations,
and that those who impeded production
or unpaired the efficiency- of any Coal
• mine would incur dire_ punishment.
.That was laughed 'off and - the. slow-
down went on. •
I The . C !. 0..may. _ go through- the.
t -tions, of . dine pl_ienrt' action,--_ties.keel>
1_its ,skirts clean, but -as long as it is
allowed' to operate in this and o?her
fields of Canadian industry we must
expect its policy of antagonism to the
war effort to .preveil through the
thoughts .and words -and deeds of its
rank -and -file members. ° • •
s.
Zn rieh Vetetiliaillale lis lwavina„ a'
i)ttlldaatg erected to be used as a /WS-
Vital for.aialurrlis. `
MISS (°; Schutt, who has been aper-
ia>ytendent of the Winghanls' ho plta1 for
over two yea '8, line tendered her
'resignation, t((t take feet Sept* nber
lst.
While . -going down a , hill at. • Port
Albert, -Where he ,: a> hell daying with,
Itis wife ° •aiid a'qp t ; .. 3C�r. U 0.
EleteJ er of Exeter slfppecl and: 'tell,
fracturing a bone in his right arm.
Menne D. Steekle,„ an old resident of
the 'Prensou • line,, :Stanley township,
passed ,away, , on August 4th • in, his
seventy-third Year. Be is 41 'rvvied by
hip Wife, five sans and fetlr daugghters;
'County and. vr9!P,ilxciai 'constables in
Oceans' Huron gathered cent'ly at the home.
o>? Provincial !don:stabie Prank Taylor
,at -Clinton and presented him, with he
occasional ,dratn t i( recognition of , his,
recent marriage. ,-
Mrs. E. S. Copeland of "Wingliann,
(and her, yoking song and daughter Were
in -a' motor car crash at the week -end
which wrecked their ' car three miles
north of (Orillia. . iYIrs. Copeland Suf-
fered
uf-'
fered • a, badly' gashed forehead and
sprained ankle, while both children
received numesous bruises.
The house on the 10th 'concession of
West W€twanosli in which Mrs.
Thomas Irwin lived alone was de-
stroyed by fire one afternoon last week.
:firs. Irwin had been away from 'home
that afternoon and w'heit she returned
the place was ablaze.,There was no
water available• and thhouse burned
° , to the ground. -
TOWNSHIPL . The death occur,;red`• on Satiird'av last
'COUNCIL of - Andrew D: Armstrong of Seaforth,
I at- the - age of seventy-nine years. . A
TOWNSHIP OF GODERICHI native of Stanley -township he spent
Council met. on August -1. Depart- I the great part of his life in that
c !township and in Tuekersmith, retiring
ment of Highw•, r : appro^vt l of contract to -•Seaforth a few years ago. •He is
for crushing and delive.fing gravel read survive(( by , his wife,. one son and
tl~i thr�►tig>n the ThonsanJ I'.slands and
l to Quebec, Mr. 'ancd- Mrs, ih 'y dale wlll,
reside In Insall,
Girl Bounced,
off Tractor
iGsac.'e ',Brock, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs, Joln 'Brot;lr, '.1inr�Ille, w'as riding
Mt. the• tractor with her father when
the machine struck some ¢tbsto'ele and
she was bounced off the seat -to the
gaunt] and the tractor' passed over
her -face 'and neck X3er jaw was
broken in, 'three paces and both ,bones
la her right wrist were fractured,
Tfadourw Dueltaril
At St. Peter's. church, Drysdale, oh
!4il.
A 7AiUMILZ'$ DAV+
=US R ,TROUXLMS
letter wntw i to the editor et
The 'Mole, atitl. Med
I have to tell someone fay trouble* or
I cannot go on. Tike ons pleasant
anal` happy 'world., has turned into a
swvatslop a toil anal drudgery, with-
-out even the promi4e of a new dr'
'tlll9 fall. X cannot ( ell ro mother
about it; for that would only add to
her worries, and 'tier life lately ha*
become filler] with -Worry. I earinot tell
my brothers. They would.' .only work
harder and longer to relieve me of
some. oe the work wltieb now 'falls to
my lot. And(1 cannot tell my ;dad,
for he is. dead,.
Dad -died five years age a° the
'boys) have, earxiedc on the taxa ever
since. They' have worked and toiled
and worried over tills (arta, for they
love it, as I love it, but they,' cannot
Saturday, August 2nd, . the marriage' mike ends -meet,' NQ (natter bow many
>f • Reta Ducharme, youngest li�aughter bushels of grain . we grow or Trow many
of
'Mr. and' ' ;11rs." "Oscar ' Dueharxne, pigs we raiser we have tie money over. -
Drysdale; to' Emery Badour, Aon of It costs. as much to grow the stuff as we
Mrs. Badour and the late Joseph get paid forth. • •
'Badour, ,was solerunizea by' Rev. The boys work`,fr°am K,• in the •mora'-
rather Martin. Later a reeeption was lugs until T or half -past in, the eyef.-
beld at the home of the.bride's parents Ings, SO de'mother and I, We cannot
with seventy -fixe guests_ in attendance. ' pay §,40 or O t month for help .or
4r. and Mrs° IBadour will reside -in we would 'have 'no money, to .pay our
Goderich, other immedlal .debts. .I raise 4ikiek
Carter—Cinder
• and Chickens • and feed ealves, beSIdes,
In a celr�emony perforIXled at St, doing, the work a girl; on. the rarm
James' church, South 'London, on Mon- ,a1,wais ;pa's 'tO do: ether takes In.
day afternoon, Nona • Mary, daughter summer boarders to help beep food ort
of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Chuter, Varna, the table, for our cream ebeque goes'
became -the -broke- of veseeete Ja°ines--fox-_other. things -now._ _,Mother needs
Garter Ph . Df son •of Mrs, Carter and her teeth' fixed, but she thasu''t any
'1(i ' money' to get them dente.
the late Alfred• �arfer, Zolidon: Canon W� do we stay on the faz°mt? '.�ie-
' W. A.. Toweshend° officiated. -Mr. and
'Irs. Carter later left_on a trip to Cause the 'birds, sizrg, in flux ]ledges at
Muskoka and on then^ return will live
daybreak. Because our mare looks,
in South London, over the'bernyard gaffe and whinnies'
gently' to 'us when we go 'across, the •
Airman id yard. Because . the "red clover at the
toad Accident back of the 'bairnsmells sweet and
Flt. -Lt, V. C. Morris, adjutant at the lushkr a'n4° fra ;rant:. Because °ot 'the
Clinton Radio School: hes > been lying, peace, and drowsy murmur of the
it} the Seaforth hospital in a serious meadows, wherre,late yesterday after
condition as the result of a motor noon, I found any kid brother asleep itt
car accident on No. $ highway near a fence earner, :lHe'is.only ilfteen and .-
(Seaforth. Ills car was in head-on had been up since �i. .1 felt''like crying
collision with one driven by a Toronto when I .saw him so young and tired»
man Flt. -Lt. Norris has but recently He woke up while I .'stood there, and;
and filed, one 'daughter. c b sion looking an with a friendly grin, said,
Dine from P ng
• and the colli
a leas h l; nes (t era]• Glenn
apparently Was the result of • his con- ' e .e in. the cool grass.
Gosh it's nice her
The 'Canadian National- Rctil sv . a -e•-•8-Sar-y n, forming to the 'Old' Oountr'y practice of Is it minting time, already?" And, it
tug sold 1>art� of their right at way Fairservice, son of Mr. and .Mrs. Thos, driving on the left side of the road. ewas,
Fairservfee, Lendesboro, die ' in Vic- � The Toronto • man was not injured. Where is 'a struggle taking place on
vvrote tt�l.in� that it 1►e assessed to August -
tile purchasers. The elern was in-' in his twenty-fourth year. He had
, torte '1-Iospltai: London,- on ugu t 2nd, Both cars were badly damaged, • • the farms' these days, ' Cr. Editor. I
;struet:ecl to divide this. up.
f lived at London for a-'short�time prier` Car. Wrecked
am a girl, and not -very old at 'that. >but
The, ' rotes" of taxation were • set as to his illness. 'His parents and four. While en route from . their home at I know, At is a struggle 'fol a fair,
w; : Conley rate S: melee; :sister-' survive.Th 'remains w • Detroit to visite' relatives at White- average- living with the right. to pay'
follows,: . ,_Tovwt t _- _.,_aere- ,.
l ,► _•church, 1:r. and Mrs, Elgin 'Pardon and our debts and upkeep as we go along.
'ship rate, mills ; general school'rate, broug ll to Lond boyo for burial. Will. the struggle .eked in „ life or, in
4 mills; Bayfield local rate, 5 mills; death for.us? Sometimes • heh I
yin w go
Iltiylield Hydro rate; 3.5/10, and spec -
to bed so 'tired, I don't.eare how' it
Sal rate,. 1 mill: S.S. No. 1, 5 2/10;°
baby ran into heavy rain at �Lucan,
• Joseph Addison,. retired C.N.12. sec- and in the poor visibility the car
tion foreman,' died at flis Pion a at Olin- struck a culverte swung around and
h
ton on °' Thursday last, in - is sixty- rolled down an embankment eight `feet,
S.S, No. 2,'`2 1/10. S.S. No. 3, 3'1/10; sixth year. He • wase a native of Hul- coming to rest on its side. Mr. iurdon
-managed to entricate his wife and
child. All Were bruised and• badly
scraped. The car was a complete
S.S: No. 4, 3 5-/10;• S.S. No. 5, 3 2/10; lett township. 'Before coming to Cline_
(S.S. No. 0, 3 X3/10 ; S.S. 'No. S, 2 3/10; ton eight years ago he lived at Rruce-
:S. S. No: 9, 18/10; S.S. No. 10, 2 mills; I field. Ale is .,survived by his wife one
S.S. • N o. '11, 2 mills ;- Union No. 2, son " Dr. J.A. Addison Zurich, and two
1. 5/10, -i niton--- 'T>: 1'2, 2 5/10 Union daughters misses Grace -and 'Gladys, at •wreck. They were brought on to that keeps coming on and off, and --r'
e y Whitechurch and later -were taken "Do you think you could come to--
Accounts
oo
Accounts paid; -Albert -Foods, 1. firs. «'alter II. Manning, formerly daughters, who- had; 'been,• ino1'idaying who had answered the door' to him.',
danger sign, $1:25; -•R 11Sturdy, i•alu- a well-known resident of Clinton; died with their grandparents, Mr- and -*re. "`Why, isn't the doctor in?" •
ing sheep, $5.40; 'Cliff Sturdy, Sheep last-`. Reek at the- home of (her son ' A: E. Pur o ' ":Oh -es, Blit, •ou o 'r .
>♦ d n, , 3 you're his
y seg, y
claim, $10; • News -Record, printing, Lewis Manning, Toronto. and the . re- Radio School ' first .patient, and tomorrow is hie -
(819..0; Signal-St0•r, printing, $0.75; mains were •broug to Clinton -far• .:.birthd'ay,, and ft would be so nice if' �t Officer Killed
.Su.j>erintendent, pay v ucher •No.1', $75. interment. Deceased• lived in • Clinton ( we could manage to give hint a surprise
Flt Lieut Charles Ewens of the
ends. But that isn't keeping chins up, •;
is it? „� ;,,-,ri
"I want to see the doctor," urged '
thepale-faetd man. "`I've got as -pain
:\ o. 8, z 6/10. home. , back to Detroit, accompanied by their I•morrow?"' asked the sweet young thing
Council then adjourned to meet- on for fifty years prior to lir. Manriing's Clinton Radio' School, died in the . between us, wouldn't it?"
tl 5 t l r' 1= ' 1 30 � ni
Man ay, . ep em e „ at1 , • death sit years 'ago, and took an fictive Clinton hospital on Sunday of injuries r
it, (, IMIOMPSON, Clerk. interest. in '.tile of airs of the town. received in a• motor accident early, •
She leaves twn Cnn� nn,T•nne daughter:. , ,.
Friday morning . .N 4 hi lavas near
aha that laid i
-e t t a an egg. �i ]ache- long.. ji., of Clinton, and Mrs. E. Pafifi�on, to the school from a point south and.
F.
t' :filbert~"`4`itu an cg,�, t►ea er; Mrs. Robert John,-tgn of.,De- wheel. .The car left the pavement, ran
p ,
trait„ who was taken ill while' visiting along the right shiielder of the road:
Howard : "Down on`' rr r
o d >t farm we had
4
Lewis
Manning, to of T r .
•o on t.o
g, Jams
e
,,,,, .• � ,-• ' •.- Brumfield. The officer was returning
Albert: "Up less= town we can beat of Vancouver„-
Worry Saps
s the car, and it is sup
was none to
Friends moiirii. the death- cif. Donild. o ed that he. had .become l owsv from
mo II r 1 •� 1" ', � p r se -The � oV S Ste
• Penalty'
Modern eliss : Mother, did you ever
flirt when you were .young?
Mother: Yes, dear,, I'M afraid I did.
• Mi '. s . : tte were - �et iiin`�__
ished for it? •
Mather: Yes. clear, 1 '1iiiirried your
father. i
that"
. ,.I(►hnetc il,.._tJ _L0urteen eear-old, stn -_df ,night _dr3:ing and nsji leep at the
Mr. and Mr
. c,,
"That fellow tn(Ist live Ili a very ( at the home .of his uncle. Donald F. over a hundred feet; then went into
3 • RR
i '11Iow C,tii-,veu tall l tit �ta the Wtn rham .hos. it: 1 w 'breaking
,, ( i, p t , there it• off: The officer received
small apartment."
CIae Kenzie, near - Lochalsh,„ Iie was ,the ditch -.tied ss ruek_.iL .Hydro • pole,
•( “Wley, , haven t you noticed• that his , in spite of all that could he done for severe head injuries i
� and ddnot regale'
of sidewise.
(lot; w•agillis..1 i1 n1► ;tnd•rlown, instead him he passed away: The remains conseioasnes.5 before his death in' the
• °wens removed to his •uncle's home, �--hospital. His home is at hath, Eng
STOPPED
» 4 f ff :
-or Money Back
For quick relief from itching of eezen►agpimplee, ath
tote's foot, scales, scabies, rashes and other externally
caused skin troubles, iise fast -seting, cooling, anti.
septic; (:quid D. D. 1). it tneriptioq. Greaseless.
�n quickly
I ' staiideas. Soothe')irritatia etopsintenac
mone
vourtnditchg. 35c trial ruggist todaytfor n e proveit. pgD. cpttN,yCRIPTIback. Ask
(>n(
Summertimefg: Care 'of �:•
Summer brings with it the 'p"r°oblem
of keeping the family food supply in
good condition,, - in spite of . high tem
1►eru-tures. The 'wise housekeeper ob'
serves the generally act•epted rules for
summer storage of foods, knowing that
otherwise food values will be wasteil 1
and money lost from, spoiled foods.
It, is with the• idea of assisting Cam.
adian homemakers to conserve foods by
preventing wastethrough spoilage
that the Consumer Section, Marketing
Service, -Dominion Department of Agri-
culture, draws attention' to the follow-
ing rules for, summertime care of food.
MIUK AND (CREAM are very perish-
able, and if left 'on}' a door step, tin-
proteoted from 'the heat, esour quickly,
even though 'kept cold when brought
into the- house. Tlie refrigerator is
the hest place to keep milk and -Bream,
Without a refrigerator, • milk can he
kept,sueet for n reasoWible length Qf
time, by wrapping the bottle in a Wet
clot,] and putting it irt'it dish of cold
water, or putting it in a cold basetnent.
If milk does soler, not a drop should
be wasted. ... ('ottege cheese can be
easily and quickly made by heating •
freshly soured milk to the point where
the curd separa•tse fl'oi, the whey. The
cheese can then he seasoned with salt.
and pepper and a little cream or butter
Wed, to it. 1
Sour milk can _1 T used to make sueli •
delicious tltingc lis Weenies; • and spice
cakes. 'With slur milk use i,(, teaspoon
of s�id.a to cpttli..;up of mill(, .and ,in
addition ally one teasponn of Baking
powder for each eup of flour.
MEAT is timelier very perishable
food. Keep it ti thtl•y corere+rl• with
waxed paper in a shal-low'disb or on
a plate. Take the store wrapping from
the meat as soon as you' get it 11o1110, ,
.and then put it in the refrigerator.
t'se liver the 4:li w day you `tnly • it,
and do not keep bther :raw meats on
bond for more than two days.
I t 1"TFJR ; ahsorbts odors easily.
Iieep•,it tightly covered and away from
strong -flavored foods. Rutter should
he one of the last things 'put on the
table. -Firm Mutter is more ,palatable
than sellli-tnelted butter.
I,.GI(18 must be kept in ft eoot place.
It has teen found through experiment
Wit
tt greatest volume is obtained:from
egg' whites when the eggs. are two or
three -days old- add cite :t''eutett at 1'ooui,
torneeratere. Separlcte__the'-whites from
yolk while they are cold, then let the
"•`itzfi'ttte gradually get warm. -Plan your
baking °'-s'a • s to come out even with
yolks and whites. ' If "yolks are left,• t
hove -ser, coi 'r'thetes. yvith cold Witter e
and keep in ' the °refrigjerator. They
• c`an be cooked until ''quite hard; then 1.
minced and used for sandwich fillings, -
or tiie }vitter can bevpoured off tend the
unbroken 'yolks used in cooking. 'Use
c'oolic'd egg dishes' the day you make
•them and keep in the refrigerator
until ready to use.
VF;IGI:TArr4ES'should• slot 1►e bought
too far tthea•d of time. They lose not
• only} sone of their-t'rispness, buts a Iso
some of their food value in storage.
'Keep salad( greens in .npeeh'il vegetable
paps. or in oil -silk bags, so that they
will he crisp and moist.
PRIVITS 1100(1 not be kept in the
refrigerator until they are fully ripe.
Keeping thein at room temperature will
complete 'their rip)'lting. ' Take care
not to mash soft fruits when .putting in
the refrigerator.,Melons-• shottl(1 110
wrapped in ch'i'd aper to keep their
odor from .sipreadine to other foods.',
Store them on the.top shelf.
Lrikrov)ll;s'-,'should all he u<ed
within a day or So. They should '
alwtits he kept in the, refrigerator in
a crieirrl(
'BIt,DAI) keeps bet in a- tin box.
In the summertime either have a box
with air lic>les,' er , (lo (tot close. the
lid tightly. Staid the tin and air it
well at least once, a week. 'Cookies and
crackers 5110111(1 1►e kept tightly covered
or they will take tip moistiere from the
air and become sift.
.CEREALS 5110111(1 the kept tightly
covered and not stored for too long
a • time;, If there are any sleets of
weevils, discard+ the cereal aml check
over all your supplies to make sore
nothing rise is affected.
fi )ar N REFRTGI';RAT()lit.
'OAltlii, 'Refrigerators must he' let
Mean and neat. food should he hr-
ramed so that there Is good eircul5-
tidfl of thea colt] air. Store. the most
frequently used foods where they are
easy to reach ;and do not open the
refrigerator door more oft+enr tlkatt
necessary. Defrost a mechanical re,.
frail erator frequently Or best mu1€3,
•
R.
G . r
.0
(
whence the funeral• took place to the land. He had been at the•radio school
Ripley cemetery. ,Besides hjs•paronts. ( about a month." ' '
helev s
a e four brothers and two sisters,
all residing -in Detroit. Bill °: Meer esr is .3t the---dc>o ;
1)rysdaTe--MacVicar- ' Dorothy.,' ".',e-- ;:,r
The marriage -of Margaret Vera Macs Dorothy: "How do you . know?" '
.\ icar. youngest daughter of Mr. and Bill: "1 hear it. ,,knocking."
Ctrs. Hugh MacVicar, Poplar Bill, to —"The 'Carltoneer."
Robert Jack Drysdale, 'eldest son of
Mr. and Mrs. G. CI. Drysdale: Hensel', • What is it -that -always walks with
took place on Saturday .at the home of its head down?' A nail in the sole of
Rey. Robert- 'Hicks, London. After a a shoe. •
•
• Worry over business br house -Vold
duties, sadden shhek, the insane
quest for pleasure, the foolishat-
#s
ridp t to ,. p ut•-a--week of nornaaLlife
into twenty -torr hours, feverish ae-
tivity, the/ demand for sensational
literature are all conducive 'to the
. aggravation tif,wear and tear on the
nervous system. •,� • •
If .you. are tired, listless, nervous,
of i rn n
�--,e►uid �vou�ed., tvhF�r givaMbn
Health and . Nerve Pills a chance to
help put yore on your; feet main.
They aree • body building, nerve ..
" strengthening tonic containing the
essential elements for the nervous
system.
Eke W. Mbar* O. (Ltd.. Threats. Ont.
4
0111110111,
AMOIN.eINIllar1
DO YOU EVER
visit a home to which you have not been invited? • Perh sp
you do occasionally, but do you really feel quite com-
fortable?
And that i just how people feel whdn they go into •a Store
that doesn't a,dvbrtise, or in other words, invite them hi.
fr
THE SIGNAL — STAR
can easily solve that problem for you.
o•
t , r