HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1949-09-01, Page 8PAGE EIGHT
CLINTON NEWS -RECORD':
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1,
Hello Homemakers! This is the
time of year of strenuous out-
door exercising and jaded eppet=s
ices. The family must eat well, so
it is up to us to serve cool tempt-
ing meals. Salads are the best
pick-ups. No salad has to be ex-
actly measured and made. One
new addition, (perhaps a dab of
something left over) will alter
the whole character of the dish.
You become enthusiastic over
your own creative ability when
you mix different combinations.
However, be sure to season salad
carefully—the taste's the test. As
a starter, here are favorite salad
suggestions:
1. Chopped leaf lettuce, sliced
radish, grated raw carrot, minced
young onions with French or
thick dressing. Diced cheese or
hard -cooked egg or cold meat is
a good addition tossed in.
2. Coarsely chopped spinach,
grated, raw beet, scraped onion,
broken crisp bacon and thick
dressing,
3. Diced cucumber, finely
shredded cabbage, chopped to-
mato, minced chives, flaked fish
and sour cream dressing.,
Cooked Vegetables
4. Diced carrot, green peas,
kidney beans with minced raw
onion and raw celery -with may-
onnaise.
6. Cooked or canned corn nib -
lets with half as much diced.
cooked potato, and a few sprigs
of peppercress or nasturtium
leaves with mayonnaise.
6. Cooked cauliflower pieces,
strips of green beanse with sliced
raw radish and salad dressing.
7: Diced cooked potatoes, slice
ed parsley, cucumber, maxed to-
gether with chili sauce and may-
onnaise. •
8, Shredded cooked cabbage,
chopped nuts, cubed pineapple
and French dressing,
9.'Tomato or perfection jelly
with, diced celery, pegs and cheese
Meat Salads
10. Cubed cooked veal, a little
slivered ham, diced parsley and
celery, diced orange and thick
dressing.
11. Meat, potato egg salad may
be spooned into tomato shells—
cubedtomato mixed with cold
kidney beans and tart dressing
for a cold meat roll. (jelly -roll
fashion)•
12. Jellied meat with pieces of
tomato, diced prunes and finely
grated cabbage,
Colorful Salads
,13. Grapefruit sections, diced
orange, cubed canned peaches and
fruit salad dressing with dates
rolled into cocoanut.
14. Cottage cheese with minced
candied peel, canned apricot
halves rolled in chopped nuts and.
jelly mold with whipped cream
dressing.
15. Sliced pineapple, fresh
sweetened berries;: mixed with
fruit juice and crushed mint leaf,
half of banana rolled in nuts and
wedges of creamed cheese.
Fake A Tip
1. One raw vegetable should
be chopped coarse when other
tossed greens .are minced, or
grated.
2. Toss greens together using
a fork in each hand.
3. Add beets only at serving
time because of their running
colour.
4. Drain fruits thoroughly for
salad or they will have a tend-
ency to thin the dressing,
5. Chill plates es well as in-
gredients to held fragrance and
crispness.
6. Fresh fruit juices are fine
in a French dressing for fruit
molds.
Requested Recipes
Buttermilk Dressing
Vs clove garlic,
a/r medium-sized 'green 'pep-
per, finely chopped
2 hard -cooked eggs, chopped
3 radishes, minced
Fair Crop of Fruit
Harvested This Year
Middlesex, Huron and Lantbton
counties are harvesting a "fair"
crop of fruit this year, accord-
ing to Dominion Inspector J. J.
Johnson, London.
Insect damage in apples is un-
usually heavy this year, Mr,
Johnsen warned. The damage has
cut the apple crop from previous
estimates but there will still be
a good. crop.
Plums and pears are etilll in
limited supply, Mr. Johnson said.
He predicted a heavier crop of
pears than last year, but canning
plants would take a large amount.
Duchess apples are at their
peak, and harvest of Melbas is
starting. There will be a good
crop of Northern ` ropy and Mac-
intosh Red varieties.
Coddling moths are damaging
apples heavily, and 30 to 40 per
cent in some orchards will be
culled for cider. European Red
Mite is also taking a toll, bronz-
ing the leaves of Delicious trees.
Before you ever cross the road—"PAUSE-Look both ways" is your safety code.
Wise persons, young and old, use extra care when crossing road-
ways. They look both LEFT and RIGHT to see that the way is
clear. It takes but a second ... but it spells S -A -F -E -T -Y.
GEO. H. DOUCETT, Minister
ONTARIO DEPARTMENT
OF HIGHWAYS
Marketing Committee
Lowers Wheat Prices
An Increased acreage of fall
wheat is expected to be planted
in Ontario this year, members of
the Seed Marketing and Publicda
ity Committee, Ontario Crop
Improvement Association, pre-
dict. It is reported that early
harvesting will permit prepara-
tion of land early andlarge
amounts of home-grown feed
grains are needed, so that seeding
is expected to be more extensive.
At a recent meeting, in re-
sponse, to many requests for guid-
ance in seed prices, ,the com-
mittee agreed on- minimum quo-
tations at the farm. Prices, set
at the meeting, to include bags,
are considerably lower than in
1948. They are:
Fall Wheat .Commercial No, 1,
all approved varieties, $2.25 per
bushel. Registered No. 1, Daw-
son's Golden Chaff variety, $2.75
per bushel. Last year's prices
for Registered Dawson's and No.
1 Cornell 595 was $3 per bushel.
No prices were set for other
grains.
SUFFERS 'SHOCK
BLUEVALE—Gordon Walker,
an employee of Bluevale Cream-
ery, has been released from hos-
pital at Wingham, where he had
been a patient suffering from
the effects of a shock received
during an electrical storm. Mr.
Walker, whose home is in Brus-
sels district, had been at work
when the storm struck. At the
time he did not consider the shock
as a serious one, but on a later
check-up by his physician enter-
ed hospital to recover from a
heart condition,
1 teaspoon salt
t/z teaspoon paprika
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons white vinegar
6 tablespoons cottage 'cheese
ik cup buttermilk (or thick
sour cream)
Rub the salad dressing bowl
with the cut clove of garlic. In
the bowl, mix the green pepper,
heard -cooked egg, radishes, salt
and paprika. Add lemon juice,
vinegar, cottage cheese and but-
termilk. Beat with rotary beat -I
er to combine. Serve on head Lashes and maximum reform
lettuce, sliced cucumbers, shred- atory terms were handed down
ded raw cabbage and so on. (This in court at Exeter to three of
recipe makes a rather generous seven Parkhill district youths
amount of dressing—it may be who admitted creating a crime
stored in the refrigerator and wave that terrorized South Huron
used as required). from December, 7,948, until last
All-Star Dressing
2 tablespoons salad oil
r!s cup enriched flour
1 cup water
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon salt
;tl4 teaspoon sugar
2 egg yolks
1 cup salad oil
1 teaspoon dry mustard
Make white sauce of first three
ingredients; pour into combined
remaining ingredients. Beat rap-
idly with rotary or electric beat-
er. Makes 21 cups.
Thousand Island Dressing
Combine 11/2 cups All-Star
Dressing, 3 hard -cooked eggs,
chopped, 11/2 dill pickles, chop-
ped, r/,, cup chopped celery, 1
green pepper, minced, 1 small
onion, minced, and chili sauce to
taste. 'Serve on cool, crisp let-
tuce wedges.
Rye—Commercial, . No. 1t with
premium for Horton variety and
registered grades according to
local demands, $2 per bushel.
Winter barley—Commercial No.
1, $2 and registered and certified
grades of Wong variety, $2.50 per
bushSlight variations from these
prices may be expected due to
locality, variety and quality.
A summary of the small seed
ituation reveals little carry-over
in any seeds except red clover
nd alsike. Demands for export
re very keen at favorable prices
and prospects " for this year's
crop are not at all promising.
The committee is made up of
representatives from various sec-
tions of Ontario together with of-
ficials of the Dominion and, On-
tario Departments of Agriculture.
W. E. Breckon, a farmer at Free-
man in Halton County is chair-
man and R. E. Goodin, Ontario
Department of Agriculture, To-
ronto, is secretary.
!.ashes and Jail
Dashwood Attackers
* • •
Anne Allan invites you to write
to her % CLINTON NEWS -
RECORD. Send in your sug-
gestions on 'homemaking prob-
lems and watch this column for
replies.
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Motors
July 31. •
Pleading guilty to charges of
robbery with violence arising
from an attack on two elderly
Dashwood brothers, Jonah and
William Kessel, on March 29,
Edward Ryan, 18, of R. R. 8,
Parkhill; Willis Hodgins, 19, of
Parkhill, .and Joseph Hartman,
18, -of Mount Carmel each re-
ceived terms of two years less a
day in Ontario Reformatory. ,
Ryan and Hartman also were
sentenced to ten strokes of the
lash, while Hodgins was sentenc-
ed to five.
Four others, Carl Morley, 19,
of Parkhill; James Winegarden,
19, of Parkhill; Gordon Hodgins,
18, R.R. 8, Parkhill (no relation
to Willis Hodgins), and Norman
Wilson, 19, of Parkhill, were giv-
en lesser terms for their admitted
part in the crime wave. g
Morley, Winegarden and Wil-
son drew terms of eight months
definite, 12 months indefinite in
Ontario reformatory. G. Hodgins
was sentenced to serve three
months in common jail.
Goderich Now Town
Of Budding Majorettes
Two years ago taxi driver Art
Curry, Goddrich, thought it would
be nice if the Goderich's Blue -
water band had three drum ma-
jorettes to lead the way on par-
ades. Today, Goderich has so
many majorettes there, aren't
enough bands to go around.
"The original. three majorettes
went over so well that next year
a girls' pipe band started," Mr.
Curry said. "Naturally they had
to have majorettes too."
That started it. Today there
are three senior majoriettes,
three intermediates. and 24 jun-
iors. `
"Before we knew it, the idea
mushroomed," said Mrs, Joseph
Lemaire, director of the junior
section. "Still the phone rings.
Other mothers want their dau-
ghters to join the parade."
Average age for the junior sec-
tion is six.
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your battery too,
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See Us Today
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PHONE 465 - CLINTON
•
Soy Bean Growers
Warned by Board
Reports that some soybean
growers in Ontario ere contract-
ing for the 1949 crop at $2 a
bushel have reached officiate of
the Ontario Departanent of Agri-
culture.
Dealers who aredoing this are
attempting to spread panic and
confusion, F. K. B. Stewart, sec-
retary of the Farm Products
Marketing Board said. A mar-
keting scheme, voted on by the
growers, and approved with mare
than 70 per cent in favor, is
now in effect, Mr. Stewart point-
ed out. Purpose of the scheme
is tohave orderly marketing of
the Ontario soy bean crop.
Wellknown throughout Ontario,
Mr. Stewart formerly was Ag-
ricultural Representative for
Huron County, stationed at Clin-
ton.
Licence Needed
"Under provisions of the mar-
keting scheme, no person shall
engage in Ontario, in the busi-
ness of a dealer in soy beans,
without first securing a licence
from the board," Mr. Stewart
said. "As yet no such licences
have bean issued. In other words
contracts now being signed will
have no force or effect."
It was pointed out that soy
beans have advanced in price on
the American market recently,
but no price for the 1949 crop,
produced .in Ontario, has been
set es yet. A meeting .of the.
negotiating committee provided
for in the Soy Bean Marketing
Scheme is planned sometime
this month.
This negotiating committee is
made up of six growers appoint-
ed by the local board; three
dealers named by the dealers and
three procssors appointed by the
processors.
The number of eggs
well -cared -for hen
lay, (up to the limit of her inherited ability) DEPEN
LARGELY on her FEED.
Profits are determined on continued good producti
NOT on short term high production.
So feed a well-balanced, freshly mixed feed made H
National Feed Mix to give your egg machines
material needed to keep them vigorous and health
and to build the eggs week after week.
GET MORE MONEY F
YOUR EGGS BY HOLOIN
THEM AT THE "A" QUALITY
WHICH THEY ARE LAID —
Keep nests and litter clean.
Allow one nest to five birds.
Cool eggs rapidly to 50 degrees and hold in clean, co
spot.
Cool eggs in open trays or wire basket in 3 to 5 hour,
Eggs packed directly into case or solid pail take 11
20 hours to cool—'thus losing "A" qualify.
® ®arca ® Mal 'mMI on MO=OD MIA Mall
ice your local NATIONAL Feed Dealer today
WM. STONli SONS LIMITEII
INGERSOLL ONTARIO
!nsist on NATIONAL well -cured, properly-hWcm ed
erti