HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1975-10-16, Page 22Page 2--Cuossreads-- Leo 16, 19`lr 5--
etter lAge
‘1•)39ic
By ROBERT D.
RUSENBLUM
For many years the Mixed
irs was a fixture on the
tournament bridge scene.
Recently it has been
relegated a supporting role
at both regional and sectional
levels or eliminated entirely
• There are many more
women tournament players
than men. When a Mixed
Pairs championship is sched-
uled many women can't find
a partner. Their choice is
restricted — play a second-
ary event or stay home.
One solution is to substitute
an Unmixed Pairs, limited to
members of a single sex play-
ing together. This then be-
comes a combination Men's -
Women's Pairs. The Un-
mixed hasn't caught hold
though. The ladies don't care
for it. Apparently men usual-
ly garner the tbp places al-
though outnumbered.
f' Mixed is a social event
and invariably one of the
must exciting if unevenly
:witched of any tournament.
Winning scores often run high
due to the imbalance of the
field. Pairs with skilled wom-
en players dominate the
results. -
Today we present a -typical
Mixed Pairs fiasco.
If South's bid of three no-
trump seems strange,
ascribe it to IViixed Pairs
tactics. kis an unwritten rule
that the male partner always4
plays the no-trump contracts.
Had South passed East's pre-
emptive overcall there was a
chance his partner might 'be-,
come declarer in the same
contract — something no self-
respecting male would allow.
West obediently led the
deuce of spades — another
precept of Mixed Pairs. The
female must always lead
partner's suit, even if void.
The male partner retahis the
sole right to manipulate. .
Both declarer and the de-
fenders made several mis-
takes. Declarer won the first
trick and played the, king of
hearts from his hand on the
slim chance East held the
\singleton queen. It was
flashy. It was imaginative. It
was wrong!
. -Entries ,tb the South hand
were in short supply. Better a
low heart towards dummy in-
' tending to fin the nine.
Thus the king provide a
•
subsequent reentry to attack
East won the heart ace and
made the questionable return
of the eight of clubs. A spade
is best. Although there is no
future for the defense in
spades, declarer Ls forced to
play a club himself on win-
ning a spade in dummy.
!Declarer's chances are
slim. However, a pregnable
defense rushed to the rescue.
On lead with the dub king
South continued hearts and
blunder. A third heart put
West in to open up diamonds.
With the jack well placed
declarer was able to secure
two diamond tricks. West's
switch was another error — a
club return surrenders only
one trick. South managed to
unscramble his entries and
take three spades and two
tricks in each other suit,
making three no-trump.
Note what happens should
West win the second heart
and fire back another heart.
If declarer unblocks dum-
my's nine under the queen
and then wins the jack, his
eight provides an extra entry.
The ten of diamonds is led,
West ducks and.East wins the
ace. A third spade puts the
lead in dummy and forces a
diamond return into West's
king -jack. Now the defense
wins two hearts and three
diamonds to break the con-
tract.
Here's to the Mixed P,airs
— a comedy of errors.
North
West East •
S 2 SJ 1098 754
TRY IT
You'll itke it
ONE-MAN OPERATION—"This is where it all starts," said Mr. Stoermer as he worked
in the moulding pit of his bell foundry in Breslau. The foundry Is one of its kind in Canada
and one of 20 in the world.
South
C AKJ32
Paper chase
successful
Dealer: South; North-South
were vulnerable.
South West North East
'3 NT Pass Pass Pass
West led the deuce of
spades.
The great Paper Chase at
Minto Glen got off to a racing
start at 2:30 Sunday, October 5.
The excellent weather made this
a great race with one of the
chasers carrying and blowing a
bugle. The fox had a 5 -minute
head start and managed to elude
the pursuers for a full 11/2 hours,
finally being caught almost
where the race had started.
Receiving first prize of a
season's pass was Jamie Kosalle,
Harriston; second, ski bindings,
Linda Lawrence of RR 2, Ayton;
the next six and winners of ski
locks were John Heise, RR 3,
Clifford, Kim Moody, Mount
Forest, Garth Lawrence, RR 2,
Ayton, Mike Lebbink, Harriston,
Paula Terryberry, Mount Forest,
Tommy Gibson, RR 3, Harriston.
The blance of racers each
received a pass for one day's tow
ticket.
The success of the day will
likely make this an annual fall
By Marl Beaked
to anyone who ttaa huglicithettleit,
season's lauckiebefa CM) bUt
perhaps you can Save thiS
information for use neltt Year.
HUCKLEBERRIES
It seems to improve the flavor
if you let the berries stand for Iwo
or three days in a basket in the
cellar before removing them
from the stems.
You need a 6 -quart • basket of
berries for this recipe. Remove
from stems. Wash twice in cold
water. Drain. Add hot boiling
water. Cook for 30 minutes with
lid on, and stir often. Drain off the
water.
Add 3 cups lukewarm water, 6
cups sugar (good measure), 1
lemon (juice only) or the same
amount of vinegar. Cook for 30
minutes or so, or until the skins
burst. Makes 6 pints.
Ground sausage meat can be
cooked into, a really scrumptious
dish as I discovered when I tried
Sausage Surprise. Best of all, it's
quick and easy to make. Try it .
you'll like it, too.
SAUSAGE SURPRISE
1 lb. ground sausage meat
14 cup milk
Crushed cornflakes
2 eggs, well beaten
1 peeled apple, shredded
Combine sausage meat and
apple. Shape into patties. Com-
bine well -beaten eggs and milk.
Dip the patties into the egg mix-
ture, then into the crushed corn-
flakes. Place on a cold skillet
pan, and fry slowly for 15-20
minutes. Should be golden brown
when cooked.
If you have an abundance of
cabbages in your garden, and a
family that enjoys cole slaw, then
I have just the recipe for you. It's
a real tirap-saver as well. This
cole slaw will keep for up to two
weeks in a sealed container in
your refrigerator, but I can al-
most assure that it will be eaten
long before the two weeks are up.
YOU CAN POW
By Gene Von
ACROSS
1 - Musical instru-
ment
11 - Conforms
12 - Everyone indi-
vidually (abb.)
14 - To schedule
16 - Emergency
Service (,abb.)
17 - Paired
18 - Tease (alang)
19 - A brace (abb.)
20 - Yearn
21 - A visionary
23 - British award
24 - Circle segment
26 - Tree
27 - Bulgarian city
28 - Greek letter
30 - Transport Ship
(abb.)
31 - Preposition
32 - A fabric
33 - Man's name
34 - Baba
35 - Preposition
36 - Vibrating
38 - Short, blunt
object
39 - Co liege degree
40 - Manpower
42 - Evict
43 - Metric unit
of area
44 - Brazilian state
45 - Abraham's
birthplace
46 - TO turf previously
DOWN
Petry
composition
4 - Musical note
MULIMOMENEON
OCIA1 CO MEMO
RIMY EH UMPI0 M
MIN CEI EU NM
minim mu WCW
EU HUMMED 0
M OMUM Inn Ellin
MOBEIM CO MEM
WWWILEWZIMIUU
dramas
6 - Little letters
7 - Capital Stock
8 - Rough sheds
9 - Recent
10 - Modernized
13 - Promoting
intelligence
15 - Roman deuce
17 --To relate
wrongly
19 - Tranquil
20 - Greek letter
22 - Literary
23 - Stnall vessel
for liquids
25 - Destroy
29 - Inferior
ratcehorses
37 - Weight unft
38 - Pour forth
41 - Suffix et
comparison
43. - Fortify
44 - Hawaiian dish
46 - Greek letter
MOULDING PIT—The earth in the pit is used to pack the
moulds in which the bells are cast. The shelves behind a're
lined with casts for some of the smaller bells. Mr. Stoermer
satisfies most of Canada's bell requirements.
H. GORDON
GREEN
1Crossroads
Published every Wednesday as the big, action cross-country section in
The Listowel Banner, The Wingham Advance -Times and The Mount
Forest Confederate. Wenger Bros. Limited, publishers, Box 390,
Wingham.
Barry Wenger, Pres. Robert 0. Wenger, Sec.-Treas.
Display and Classified ad deadline—
Tuesday, week prior to publication date.
REPRESENTATIVES
Canadian Community Ontario Weekly
Newspapers Association , Newspaper Assoc.,
Suite 51, 127 George St.,
2 Bloor St., West, Oakville 884-0184
Toronto 962-4000
It just happened that the day
hfter our R.C.M.P. told Canada's
Solicitor -General Warren All-
mand that the Red Power move-
ment was threatening this
nation's security, I was reading
an account of the battle of One
Arrow Reserve. One Arrow was
out near Duck Lake, Assinboia,
now Saskatchewan, and it isn't
likely that you've ever heard of it.
Certainly the story ?f that
engagement wasn't in any of your
school history books, but then
history books have a comfortable
habit of recording the glorius
chapters of the past, and the
Battle of One Arrow wasn't
exactly glorious for our side.
It all started when a very tall,
very distinguished looking young
Cree named Almighty Voice
killed a steer belonging to a
rancher. Almighty Voice probab-
ly had no conscience abOut that.
The white man has always used
starvation as a means to wage
war on people who are in his way,
and he had deliberately killed off
the buffalo. There seems to be no
doubt that Almighty Voice and
his people were hungry. To Ser-
geant C. C. Colebrook howeVer,
-Almighty Voice had been guilty
of a very serious crime and after
the big Cree had been placed in a
cell at Duck Lake, he was told
that he could be hanged for his
crime. Probably not true, of
course, and Almighty Voiee
wasn't frightened, but the
remark enraged him so much
that he broke jail and escaped by
awimming the icy waters of the
Saskatc4wan River. Then he
stopped # the Cree Reserve just
long enough to get amunition,
food and to persuade a pretty
young Cree woman to go along
with him.
Sergeant Colebrook meanwhile
enlisted the aid of a half-breed
scout and took out after Almighty
Voice, and next morning they
overtook him.
"Stop or I'll shoot!" the Indian
warned. But Colebrook refused to
listen and fell dead with a bullet
through his throat.
For nearly two years the
Mounties hunted Almighty Voice,
mustering special patrols all
through the ,territory, disguising
themselves as traders, question-
ing other Indians everywhere.
Not a sign of Almight Voice could
be found. And then one May
morning in 1897 came the news
that Almighty Voice had sur-
faced, and that he had declared
war on the whole North-West
Mount Police Force. And to show
that he wasn't fooling he
seriously wounded a police scout
who came along to investigate.
A detachment of eleven men of
F. Division and Postmaster
Grundy of Duck Lake went out to
answer the challenge, and all that
they succeeded in doing was to
drive Almighty Voice and the two
young Indians who had now
joined him into a large grove of
poplar. The Mounties tried to set
fire to the grove. It didn't work
and two of their number, includ-
ing Inspector Allan who ied the
foray, staggered away badly
wounded. Re -enforcements were
summoned from Regina and a
special train started out from
that point with two officers, 24
men and two cannon. But by the
time these had arrived and the
cannon set in place, two more of
the white men lay dead and
BENCH HOOK
A bench stop is in-
dispensable in a well-
appofted workshop. It is a
simple device for supporting
and holding in place the wood
you are working with in cases
where a vise will not serve.
You can make a very efficient
bench hook of a piece of 3/4 -
inch lumber with a block of
wood screwed to the bottom of
one end and another block
screwed to the top of the other
end. When is use, the bench
hook is placed so that the
bottom stop butts against your
Work table, and the wood
being worked on butts against
the top stop.
14 -DAY COLE SLAW
1 cabbage, shredded
1 carrot, shredded
1 onion, grated
1 or 2 green peppers, diced
Combine above ingredients,
and mix together well.
DRESSING:
11/2 cups vinegar
1/2 cup water
11/4 scups white sugar
1 teaspoon celery seed
11/2 teaspoons mustard seed
11/2 teaspoons salt
Combine above ingredients,
and bring to a boil. Make sure the
sugar has dissolved. Let cool.
Pour over vegetables. Store in
jars in the refrigerator. For best
flaver, wait for 12 hours before
using the cole slaw. Keep re-
frigerated and use as needed.
Can be stored for up .to 14 days.
Pumpkin pie is a favourite with
most of us any time of the year.
When autumn arrives, and one
sees pumpkins in -gardens and in
the stores, one immediately
thinks of a good old-fashioned.
pumpkin pie made from scratch.
I have the recipe, if you have the
like it:
Almighty Voice was qtill shouting
his defiance at them whilst his
mother, Spotted Calf sat herself
down on a nearby ridge. Here she
shouted encouragement to him in
one breath and chanted her son's
death song in the next.
But Almighty Voice wasn't
ready to die yet, and before the
day was out another Mountie had
been shot dead. Even after the
cannon began firing into the
brush and the whole area was
ringed with white men — for they
had 'begun to come by the hun-
dreds and now from all over
Assinboia — Almighty Voice
me some food!" he
called. "Let's fight fair! You
have plenty of food and i am
staThrvrineeg !d"ays later, after there
was no more taunting from the
poplars, a cautious exploration
revealed that the white man's
power had finally done its work.
Almighty voice and his two com-
panions lay dead.
The Mounties had lost eight
dead or wounded, the cost to the
young nation was fantastic, and
the victory without any glory in it
at all. Which Is probably why you
never heard of it before. All this
to bring what the white man of-
ficially recorded as justice to one
starving Indian.
PUMPKIN PIE
2 cups cooked pumpkin
11/2 cups milk
1 cup brown sugar
2 eggs
1/4 teaspoon Cinnamon
Y2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon ginger
Mix together and put in un-
cooked pie shell. Bake for 1/2 hour
or until done.
Here is another fall treat . . .
pumpkin harvest cake. It's
another way of using up your
cooked pumpkin, and it adds a
little variety to the dessert tray.
PUMPKIN HARVEST CAKE
1/4 cup melted shortening
1 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon salt
Two-thirdS cup cooked pumpkin
1 teaspoon vanilla \
2 eggs
1/2 cup flour
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
IA2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon ginger
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2, teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup chopped dates and nuts
Mix the above ingredients in
the order they are given. Bake in
an 8 -inch square pan. This makes
a delicious moist cake.
I have received a letter and
recipes which will be of interest
FOR VSE, IN VIII.
I plot of 'the *hove reel with
the top.
Subuilitted
IA 'made with beet pice and
would oppreciate hearing from -
you. Please send your recipe to
The Wingham Advance -Times,
THINK MOOR
OW* ilMitilt%
AND SAVE
Don't throw out lag year's
clothes, Dye them.
TINTEX dyes are easy and
economical to use.
Sweaters, blouses, skirts;
most fabrics can be dyed
at home for about 500.
Give your old clothes new
life with TINTEX.
ESQUIRE INSTANT
COLORING
For FARM, TOWN and COUNTRY HOME OWNERS!
If you can afford monthly payments of:
$21.12 you may borrow
$39.58 you may borrow $3.000
$65.96 you may borrow $5.000
$92.34 you may borrow $7,000
The above Loans bassd on 16 per cent per annum
5 Yr. Term — 25 Yr. Amortization
Borrow for any worthwhile purpose: To consolidate your debts,
fix the car, buy cattle, or a cottage!
Fast—Courteous Service—Please Call PALMERSTON 3434632
Gerald H. Wolfe
Representing
Arnold Highman Realty Ltd.
Kitchener, 1-519-744-6251
Member of Ontario Mortgage Broker's Association
WATER WELL DRILLING
DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LIMITED
OFFERS YOU-
-75 years of successful water development
- The most modern, fast equipment available
- Highly trained personnel
- Fast service and free estimates
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PUT EXPERIENCE
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WELL DRILLING LIMITED
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MOBILE HOMES
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*large selection of double -wide and single -wide models on
display.
*fast, efficient delivery and set up by professional servicemen.
*low prices assured by our volume buying ahd easy purchase
plans.
NIOBILIFE CENTRE
4166 KING ST. E. R.R. 3, KITCHENER
No. 8 Hwy. between Hwy. 401 and Kitchener 653-5788
Starvation
stalks millions. \
A massive, unprecedented human tragedy is in the making.
Who cares?
During this world food crisis
I pledge to skip or cut down
a meal a week for the
rest of this year and send my
"empty plate money" to
CARE for the starving
people overseas.
Send your pledge to:
CARE Canada, Department 4
63 Sparks St. Ottawa KIP 6A6
1
•
t441
IS'
16
ill
iii
2S
iii
11
-
19
So
SI
St
33
1
39
Mir
"
illil
IP
a 11
ill
S9
Ma.
43
44
10
45
46
41
ACROSS
1 - Musical instru-
ment
11 - Conforms
12 - Everyone indi-
vidually (abb.)
14 - To schedule
16 - Emergency
Service (,abb.)
17 - Paired
18 - Tease (alang)
19 - A brace (abb.)
20 - Yearn
21 - A visionary
23 - British award
24 - Circle segment
26 - Tree
27 - Bulgarian city
28 - Greek letter
30 - Transport Ship
(abb.)
31 - Preposition
32 - A fabric
33 - Man's name
34 - Baba
35 - Preposition
36 - Vibrating
38 - Short, blunt
object
39 - Co liege degree
40 - Manpower
42 - Evict
43 - Metric unit
of area
44 - Brazilian state
45 - Abraham's
birthplace
46 - TO turf previously
DOWN
Petry
composition
4 - Musical note
MULIMOMENEON
OCIA1 CO MEMO
RIMY EH UMPI0 M
MIN CEI EU NM
minim mu WCW
EU HUMMED 0
M OMUM Inn Ellin
MOBEIM CO MEM
WWWILEWZIMIUU
dramas
6 - Little letters
7 - Capital Stock
8 - Rough sheds
9 - Recent
10 - Modernized
13 - Promoting
intelligence
15 - Roman deuce
17 --To relate
wrongly
19 - Tranquil
20 - Greek letter
22 - Literary
23 - Stnall vessel
for liquids
25 - Destroy
29 - Inferior
ratcehorses
37 - Weight unft
38 - Pour forth
41 - Suffix et
comparison
43. - Fortify
44 - Hawaiian dish
46 - Greek letter
MOULDING PIT—The earth in the pit is used to pack the
moulds in which the bells are cast. The shelves behind a're
lined with casts for some of the smaller bells. Mr. Stoermer
satisfies most of Canada's bell requirements.
H. GORDON
GREEN
1Crossroads
Published every Wednesday as the big, action cross-country section in
The Listowel Banner, The Wingham Advance -Times and The Mount
Forest Confederate. Wenger Bros. Limited, publishers, Box 390,
Wingham.
Barry Wenger, Pres. Robert 0. Wenger, Sec.-Treas.
Display and Classified ad deadline—
Tuesday, week prior to publication date.
REPRESENTATIVES
Canadian Community Ontario Weekly
Newspapers Association , Newspaper Assoc.,
Suite 51, 127 George St.,
2 Bloor St., West, Oakville 884-0184
Toronto 962-4000
It just happened that the day
hfter our R.C.M.P. told Canada's
Solicitor -General Warren All-
mand that the Red Power move-
ment was threatening this
nation's security, I was reading
an account of the battle of One
Arrow Reserve. One Arrow was
out near Duck Lake, Assinboia,
now Saskatchewan, and it isn't
likely that you've ever heard of it.
Certainly the story ?f that
engagement wasn't in any of your
school history books, but then
history books have a comfortable
habit of recording the glorius
chapters of the past, and the
Battle of One Arrow wasn't
exactly glorious for our side.
It all started when a very tall,
very distinguished looking young
Cree named Almighty Voice
killed a steer belonging to a
rancher. Almighty Voice probab-
ly had no conscience abOut that.
The white man has always used
starvation as a means to wage
war on people who are in his way,
and he had deliberately killed off
the buffalo. There seems to be no
doubt that Almighty Voice and
his people were hungry. To Ser-
geant C. C. Colebrook howeVer,
-Almighty Voice had been guilty
of a very serious crime and after
the big Cree had been placed in a
cell at Duck Lake, he was told
that he could be hanged for his
crime. Probably not true, of
course, and Almighty Voiee
wasn't frightened, but the
remark enraged him so much
that he broke jail and escaped by
awimming the icy waters of the
Saskatc4wan River. Then he
stopped # the Cree Reserve just
long enough to get amunition,
food and to persuade a pretty
young Cree woman to go along
with him.
Sergeant Colebrook meanwhile
enlisted the aid of a half-breed
scout and took out after Almighty
Voice, and next morning they
overtook him.
"Stop or I'll shoot!" the Indian
warned. But Colebrook refused to
listen and fell dead with a bullet
through his throat.
For nearly two years the
Mounties hunted Almighty Voice,
mustering special patrols all
through the ,territory, disguising
themselves as traders, question-
ing other Indians everywhere.
Not a sign of Almight Voice could
be found. And then one May
morning in 1897 came the news
that Almighty Voice had sur-
faced, and that he had declared
war on the whole North-West
Mount Police Force. And to show
that he wasn't fooling he
seriously wounded a police scout
who came along to investigate.
A detachment of eleven men of
F. Division and Postmaster
Grundy of Duck Lake went out to
answer the challenge, and all that
they succeeded in doing was to
drive Almighty Voice and the two
young Indians who had now
joined him into a large grove of
poplar. The Mounties tried to set
fire to the grove. It didn't work
and two of their number, includ-
ing Inspector Allan who ied the
foray, staggered away badly
wounded. Re -enforcements were
summoned from Regina and a
special train started out from
that point with two officers, 24
men and two cannon. But by the
time these had arrived and the
cannon set in place, two more of
the white men lay dead and
BENCH HOOK
A bench stop is in-
dispensable in a well-
appofted workshop. It is a
simple device for supporting
and holding in place the wood
you are working with in cases
where a vise will not serve.
You can make a very efficient
bench hook of a piece of 3/4 -
inch lumber with a block of
wood screwed to the bottom of
one end and another block
screwed to the top of the other
end. When is use, the bench
hook is placed so that the
bottom stop butts against your
Work table, and the wood
being worked on butts against
the top stop.
14 -DAY COLE SLAW
1 cabbage, shredded
1 carrot, shredded
1 onion, grated
1 or 2 green peppers, diced
Combine above ingredients,
and mix together well.
DRESSING:
11/2 cups vinegar
1/2 cup water
11/4 scups white sugar
1 teaspoon celery seed
11/2 teaspoons mustard seed
11/2 teaspoons salt
Combine above ingredients,
and bring to a boil. Make sure the
sugar has dissolved. Let cool.
Pour over vegetables. Store in
jars in the refrigerator. For best
flaver, wait for 12 hours before
using the cole slaw. Keep re-
frigerated and use as needed.
Can be stored for up .to 14 days.
Pumpkin pie is a favourite with
most of us any time of the year.
When autumn arrives, and one
sees pumpkins in -gardens and in
the stores, one immediately
thinks of a good old-fashioned.
pumpkin pie made from scratch.
I have the recipe, if you have the
like it:
Almighty Voice was qtill shouting
his defiance at them whilst his
mother, Spotted Calf sat herself
down on a nearby ridge. Here she
shouted encouragement to him in
one breath and chanted her son's
death song in the next.
But Almighty Voice wasn't
ready to die yet, and before the
day was out another Mountie had
been shot dead. Even after the
cannon began firing into the
brush and the whole area was
ringed with white men — for they
had 'begun to come by the hun-
dreds and now from all over
Assinboia — Almighty Voice
me some food!" he
called. "Let's fight fair! You
have plenty of food and i am
staThrvrineeg !d"ays later, after there
was no more taunting from the
poplars, a cautious exploration
revealed that the white man's
power had finally done its work.
Almighty voice and his two com-
panions lay dead.
The Mounties had lost eight
dead or wounded, the cost to the
young nation was fantastic, and
the victory without any glory in it
at all. Which Is probably why you
never heard of it before. All this
to bring what the white man of-
ficially recorded as justice to one
starving Indian.
PUMPKIN PIE
2 cups cooked pumpkin
11/2 cups milk
1 cup brown sugar
2 eggs
1/4 teaspoon Cinnamon
Y2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon ginger
Mix together and put in un-
cooked pie shell. Bake for 1/2 hour
or until done.
Here is another fall treat . . .
pumpkin harvest cake. It's
another way of using up your
cooked pumpkin, and it adds a
little variety to the dessert tray.
PUMPKIN HARVEST CAKE
1/4 cup melted shortening
1 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon salt
Two-thirdS cup cooked pumpkin
1 teaspoon vanilla \
2 eggs
1/2 cup flour
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
IA2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon ginger
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2, teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup chopped dates and nuts
Mix the above ingredients in
the order they are given. Bake in
an 8 -inch square pan. This makes
a delicious moist cake.
I have received a letter and
recipes which will be of interest
FOR VSE, IN VIII.
I plot of 'the *hove reel with
the top.
Subuilitted
IA 'made with beet pice and
would oppreciate hearing from -
you. Please send your recipe to
The Wingham Advance -Times,
THINK MOOR
OW* ilMitilt%
AND SAVE
Don't throw out lag year's
clothes, Dye them.
TINTEX dyes are easy and
economical to use.
Sweaters, blouses, skirts;
most fabrics can be dyed
at home for about 500.
Give your old clothes new
life with TINTEX.
ESQUIRE INSTANT
COLORING
For FARM, TOWN and COUNTRY HOME OWNERS!
If you can afford monthly payments of:
$21.12 you may borrow
$39.58 you may borrow $3.000
$65.96 you may borrow $5.000
$92.34 you may borrow $7,000
The above Loans bassd on 16 per cent per annum
5 Yr. Term — 25 Yr. Amortization
Borrow for any worthwhile purpose: To consolidate your debts,
fix the car, buy cattle, or a cottage!
Fast—Courteous Service—Please Call PALMERSTON 3434632
Gerald H. Wolfe
Representing
Arnold Highman Realty Ltd.
Kitchener, 1-519-744-6251
Member of Ontario Mortgage Broker's Association
WATER WELL DRILLING
DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LIMITED
OFFERS YOU-
-75 years of successful water development
- The most modern, fast equipment available
- Highly trained personnel
- Fast service and free estimates
- Guaranteed wells at lowest cost
PUT EXPERIENCE
TO WORK FOR YOU1
DAVIDSON4 Rota Pr yi Oa nNdE P3e5r7c u1s9s6i0o n Drills
WINGHAM
WELL DRILLING LIMITED
"ONTARIO'S FINEST WATER WELLS SINCE 1900"
MOBILE HOMES
DOUBLE -WIDE HOMES
.Glendale .Pyramid .Marlette .Bendix
*large selection of double -wide and single -wide models on
display.
*fast, efficient delivery and set up by professional servicemen.
*low prices assured by our volume buying ahd easy purchase
plans.
NIOBILIFE CENTRE
4166 KING ST. E. R.R. 3, KITCHENER
No. 8 Hwy. between Hwy. 401 and Kitchener 653-5788
Starvation
stalks millions. \
A massive, unprecedented human tragedy is in the making.
Who cares?
During this world food crisis
I pledge to skip or cut down
a meal a week for the
rest of this year and send my
"empty plate money" to
CARE for the starving
people overseas.
Send your pledge to:
CARE Canada, Department 4
63 Sparks St. Ottawa KIP 6A6
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