HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News Record, 1944-02-03, Page 7"THURS., FIE3.`3rd. 1944
THE
CLINTON . NEWS -RECORD
HOUSEHOLD JSEHOLD ECONOMICS CAP. O F CHILDREN
Ft4,a ,v.Spec�a//
mit% 5.1118187y05;2cR5jER;
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Ir EA.
Good -Night or Good -Bye
w«.+«+r+•• By "PEG"
A business man, as he Talked a- and women .of adult andeven of old
*long the street one day, was struck age who_are passing on into the next
by a ear, critically injured. He was world with no ]tope of Heaven. What
''removed at once to the hospital where a tragedy! Would that there were
he was given two hours to settle up more Mothers like little John's whb.
his earthly affairs. He was a devout is looking forward .to the time when
'Christain and when his wife and she can tell her son tine story of Jes-
-family joined -him they talked quiets us Christ, the Saviour of the. world. -
ly not of this world, but of the realer We look about us many times and
beyond. He spoke words of love and wonder what the world is coming to.
'encouragement to his wife, two sons People have no thought whatsoever of
and two daughters. These children the future: On the whole our young
had followed in the footsteps of their people are a gay happy lot but they
seem to have so little thought of their
God-fearing Father and litotlier.
'When the Father finished his part- Salvation; the minds . of
Ing words with each .one he said even our older people seem filled
"Good -night," calling the son or with things- which a generation ago
'daughter by name. Then he came to they had no room for, oh, that we
the last son. This boy had wondered Would only get down to those things
which are worth while in life!' How
away from the straight ata narrow much happier we would all be. We
Math and had chosen cotYtpany of the should have a definite object and aim
World. He called him to his side and in life; something high which is
after telling him of what a promising wdrtlr striving for.
young man he had been until he fell .
-into, sin and how, he, had been the A letter frmx,, overseas,, the . other
'cleverest one of the family, and had
a wonderful future ahead of hint he
told him what a disappointment he
"had been to them because he had not
heeded God's word. In spite of it all
be loved' him. Then he ended by say-
ing "Good-bye, my son .Good-bye, back Erste World War I) and I"hope ter of vitamins. To -day, we know
•Good-bye, to see ,his grave before Igo back. 'that people who take the foods
Dad asked me, out'' in the woodshed, which do not supply adequate a -
Sobbing, the young " man said, I
at home when we two were alone mounts . even of one vitamin, may
'Father you have said "good -night" and
to all the others, why have you said signed active
good-bye to me." For the simple
'reason, said the father that I shall
Meet the Other -members of the family
'tin the morning' but by all the pro -
Mises that assure no of a smitten, by
those same statements of God's wend,
.1 can have no hope of seeing' you
'over there' "Good-bye, my son, good.
bye."
The story "which might quite well
be true in every family goes on to
`tell how the son realizing the terrible
state he was in, there and then asked
COOKING
PAGE ?
Nomatter bow sin, laden we are He
will accept us just as we are. Will
you not accept Ilim right now?
"What will you do without Him'
'When death bas sealed your fate,
And the word of doom tolls thru yotu
soul,
That terrible `Too late!'
What will you do 'without Him?.
When a great white Throne you.
face, •
And speechless you stand before Him,
A rejector of His grace?
You cannot do without 'Hite,
There is no other home,
By which you ever can be ''saved—
N6 way, no hope, no claim!
Without Him everlasting loss
Of love, and life, and light!
Without Him Everlasting woe,
And everlasting night.
"PEG"
THE MiXiNG BOWL
ly ANNE ALLAN
Hydro Moms Economist
Rice Muffins
% cup cooked rice, % cup: flour, t/a
tsp. salt, 3 tsp. baking powder, 1
tbsp sugar, 1 egg, 1 tbsp . flat, %
cup hulk.
Mix and sift the dry ingredients;
beat eggs and add 000ked rice which
has been well drained and, mashed.
Add melted' shortening and milk. Fold
in dry ingredierits.
The batter is stiffer than ordinary
muffins and may be dropped from
a spoon on a greased sheet. Bake in
electric oven 25-30 mins. Notes. Any
thick left -over cereal may be used.
Economical Johnny Cake
1% cups • flour, 1i cups cornmeal,
4 tsp. baking, powder, % cup milk,
h/z tbsp sugar, 3 tbsp fat, melted,
% teaspoon salt, % cup water.
Mix and sift dry ingredients.
Combine milk, water and fat. Com-
bine the liquid with the dry ingredi-
ents. Pour into a shallow pan and
bake in electric oven 20 minutes.
(425 deg,)
Applesauce Cake
1 cup sugar, s cup fat, 1 cup
applesauce, 2 cups flour, lb cup
raisins, 1 tsp 'soda, t/ tsp cinnamon,
'/z, tsp. cloves, '/a. tsp. salt, %/a: tsp.
nutmeg.
Sift together soda, spices, salt
and flour. Cream the fat, add sugar,
applesauce, dry ingredients and
raisins. Bake in moderate electric
Hello Homemakers! Within re- oven. This may be cooked in muffin
cent years the word " "vitamin" has :tins or cup cake tins.
assumed a new and vital signif- TAKE A TIP
came in the lives of people who had 1.' Make flour paste . to use in
previously given it"little, if any,
thought. To -day, the great majority fastening down a piece of oil -cloth
of active - and intelligent home- instead of tacking it .on. When this
makers do realiee that it is associ- is done it cannot wrinkle or crack
aced with both "a sound mind" and when being washed,. Waxing the
"a sound body." cloth will add to its wear too . . but
do not spread bread on it to butter
While vitamins cannot be seen, or you may have wax -flavoured
tasted' or measured by weight, they sandwiches.
can be treasured chemically. They 2. Open your lion canned p>o••
are• primarily food substances which, ducts carefully, not tot" damage t11
jar tops and rubber rings. Wash the
HEALTH
'COUPON PROBLEMS AS ANSWERED BY
LONDON RATION BOARD OFFICE
Due Dates for
Ration Coupons
Coupons now 'due are'sugar cou-
pons 14 to 26;' preserves D4 to D13;
butter 46.to 49; meat " 35 to 87.
Meat coupons pairs 38 are valid
February 10th.
One meat coupon equals • 14 pound
of canned salmon. E Coupon one to
six in ziatioie book 3 will be used for
tea -coffee, coupon El to E2. becom-
ing valid February 17.
day carried this beautiful true nes- in small quantities, are essential to
sage from one of the boys, who is a regular, and healthy way of life—a jars and rubbers thoroughly in much, according to an announcement
over there ready to do his duty to way; of life we are now seeking to soapy water and rinse twice in hot made: today by W. Harold McPhillips,
the best of his ability. "Uncle—is maintain. water. When . thoroughly dry, put prices and supply representative for
my idol (this uncle was one of those Scientific. research has unfolded a the rubber rings in the jars and put. Western Ontario.
who went over but did not come very enlightening story in the mat- on the .tops, then place on the cool Under the revised schedule the
in
�for canned
again.value fruit,
shelfcoupon v
storage
* * a eluding baby foods, is increased from
10 to .20 fluid ounces; jam, jelly,
SUGGESTION BOX • marmalade maple butter and honey
I was. going in up. service
whentlon the job,, and that there cis Mrs: C. A. says: Make a bottle butter front six to 12 'from 20 fluid. one es to 40
id ounces;
t g a
Uncle —was over there and in the l a lowering of resistance to disease. brush using a stiff wise about 10 fluid ounces, The reason for this, Mr.
poem "hi Flander's Field" it says: In the case of children vitaum de- inches long; bend it about half an McPhilli s explained, is the current
„ I inch from the end. • Cut pieces of
To .you ownfrfalling hands 'to bevy will also cause their growth, soft string 6 inches long and tie if improved supply situation of some
We throw the torch to be retarded.
Be yours • to hold it high . .1
+ bunches of 6 strands to the 'wire,
If ye breast faith With us. who die Official food rules have been care- about half an inch apart. You will
We shall not sleep though poppies fully planned in such a way as to find it convenient to . clean vases,
_
blow I assure a balanced diet. By observ- electric toasters ' and other things.
In Flanders Fields. ' ing these simple rules every day,' Mrs. J. D. says: Sew old Tubber
There was a tear in any father's people can 0111oy a variety of food rings, which cannot be used again,
eye"ancl he turned and went into the which will provide all the vitamins1on the under side of floor matt to
house and here am I almost, my third. that build and maintain stroni:,,�keep them from slipping.
Christmas over here. 'The father healthy bodies. Ignoring these bath.; Anne Allan invites you. to write to
of the items.
In addition to this the coupon
value of. comb honey has burn chang-
ed from one standard " section (one
pound) to two sections (two pounds)
and for extracted honey from 12
fluids ounces: (one pound) to 24 fluid
ounces (two pounds).
Millfeeds
News from the Wartime Prices and
Trade Board will please the farmers
and mill dealers. Conditional sales
of flour with mill feeds has been
stopped according to an, announce-
ment by W. Harold McPhillips, prices
and supply representative for the
Western Ontario region.
Conditional sales of flour with
sales of millfeed may be millers on
food dealers, and in turn by feed
dealers' on farmer customers are no
longer allowed.
The effeet of the Board's action
will be to relieve distribution from
obligation to accept any specific
CITY DWELLER
By E, Anne Ryan
Shall I still be here when spring
creeps up
On a soft, moist night, with a robin
singing?
When a spruce bough taps on a wins
dow-pane,
And the fields are bare, and the
crows are winging?
Shall T stay - where the pavements
are hard and bare
And the factory ' whistle insult the
day,
Or shall I take to the open road,
Into the country, and far away?
. Canning Sugar Ask the child on a downtown
street
Housewives will use spare t`I ' I What a trill]um is,—he will not know;
coupons in ration book No. 3 to ab- He cannot tell where the violets
tain their sugar for 1944 home can-; bloom,
ning, according to an announcement 1 Nor where bloodroot pushes a drift
made by W. Harold • McPhillips, prices
and supply representative for West-
ern Ontario. In this way consumers
will be provided with a standard al-
lotment of 10 pounds of sugar per
person. Thus larger families will
have more sugar for preserving pur-
poses than the smaller ones.
The coupons to be used for canning
sugar are already in the ration book
each "F" coupon being valid. for the
of snow.
He is welcome, for me; to the lights
and shows
That make his pleasures, from day to
day;
But oh, for tha dear brown fields
that lie
Over the hills, and far away.
Oh, the scudding of soft, white
clouds!
purchase of one pound of sugar, the Oh, the green of the winter wheat!
first becoming valid for canning sag- While the cold, brick houses stand
ar on June 1. aloof
Down the dreary length of the city
street. •
V
Custom Slaughtering and
Dressing of Poultry
quantity of flour or cereals when Custom slaughtering and dressing
placing mixed gar orders. They will )
therefore be in a position to supply of poultry have been designated as
the-millfeed requirements of their services and brought under price
farmer customers to the amount ceilings, according to an announce
available without imposing any con- nient made today by W. Harold Mc
ditions of flour purchase on them.
D Coupons Doubled
"D" coupons ., for many rationed
preserves are naw worth twice as
'God toforgive his sins and his father his manly foods ng
liad ti answer fi-om a soldier oo s means ignort the awn o her % News -Record. Send in Your
oc at of the Kingnature.• problems
and his father rejoicing was - able to who was ready to go' To renew acquaintances with the 1 suggestions on homemaking
say Good -night" to him before he out and do' battle in order to hold and watch this column 'for replies.
passed on in to the Realm. Beyond. high the torch of freedom. He had various methods of the vitamin
v______.__.
Whenyou and I leave this world an object in life, May God grant family we point out the promiueneel - God brings me Harmony- and, small
tat' the call of the angel of death will that he will live to help to carry that given by the air force in their diet SOME ONE HAD KNELT and still, '
torch}. back to Canada. to prevent night blindness or "dint- (
out. IN PRAYER His voice attunes me .to the hea-
it be good night for us or will it be
This vitamin A is found in I
' The day is long, the . burden I had veal y song.
borne:
Seemed heavier than I could bear,
And then it lifted—but I did not know
Would I could be where hepaticas
Bloom in some magic wood in May;
Surely my feet will some day turn
Up the valley, and far away.
v—
In the winter feeding of dairy cows,
roots or silage, preferably both, should
Phillips, price and supply representa- 'be provided. In addition to their food
tive for Western Ontario. value, these feeds have a beneficial
Exclusive of any packaging costs effect on the digestive system. Roots
the fees set are, for chickens over are usually pulped for feeding, but
three pounds the fee is eight cents a may be fed whole amongst the hay in
bird; for chickens three pounds and ithe manger:
under it is six cents a bird; fowl, A man seldom has occasion to be
seven cents; for ducks 15 cents; for ashamed of his associates in a worthy
geese 20 cents; and for turkey 12 cause.
cents.
my life,
My soul, though mine, lies passive
in His Hand;
God talks with me and gives me peace
in strife,
And in His light I walk and under-
stand.
God is my friend; He -shapes and
moulds my will;
God, any physician probes and
cleans my wrong;
,good-bye_ for all eternity. It is for seen and yellow enables
Have we a worthy object in life? If leafy, g vegetables
you and for int to give an answer to so what is it? Ise it something which (carrots), lives, fish .liver oils and
that question. Let that story remain we must leave behind us' at the call butter,
in our minds until such time as we of God, oris it an aim which 'we can'
"
e; it is gong carry with us right into the Great Vitamin Bl, which honestly, say Fornh assists in Some one had knelt in prayer.
t
to be good -night, . Here•nfte All that can take preventing such distresses us pink 1• tl t
A recent letter from a Young moth- s time, gives the appetite a lift is
'es told of the joy of the first Christ- that Eterhity with our Saviour will
•
be absolutely impossible. known as the "morale" vitamM. It
• 'Inas tree of a little son. Whether Y p ssible Christ is found in whole gram renes
r. a we a e
with its i oar Savatin i and without eye and indigestion and, at lite same Had taken me to Goch to very
hour,
And asked the easing of the load,
wrli not tape second place and rf that is such and He
the father, the mother or the little as wheat germ, eraciceil wheat, rye, iInfinite compassion, had stooped
child received the most pleasure out wheat we have to offer Him thennve
of it it was sure hard to say. One may assure ourselves He will not buckwheat, oatmeal and the floor down
high has been enriched by these And taken it from me.
'lovely part of the letter explained. accept it. So often even in our dens -
e
mir grains. Dried peas and beans and
that the next year the little boy rhes the Saviour who died for us 021
Mount' Calvary iscon elled to steplean meat are not so such in vitamin .We cannot tell how often as we pray Lean close' above the trembling
would be old enough to be told andY p For some bewildered one, hurt and lboughs
int leash, earthy understand the;true aside while some wordly amusement B1' 1 ,
l takes precedent over Him,'highly important to"'•recog-! distressed,
meaning of Christmas} apart from It is g y p The answer comes—but many times
"Claus". Then she went on to Will we not everyone of us say nize'the:valu.e of wheat germ which these hearts
the Glans • The definitely. "i will ive
say that .she *as teaching him his Y• g Christ His can . be served o the morning cup Find peace and rest.
bed time prayer.. He .was young yet, rightful place ;in any life and will of coffee, on top of cereal or in
:do my best to see that He has first quick bread mixtures. I ed and Faith,a
but the Mother was wisely lust going q Some one had prayed, place in church affairs even if I have I next Mixing Bowl articlehand,
God is my strength ---Beneath the
changing years,
Hei lives and moves and breathes
into my breath;
His thoughts are wings and, high
above all fears.
They bear me to the golden gates of
death.
Quebec —Frederick George Scott'
v
TO THE MOON
• By Lotto Pierce
on to the point where the little brain tostand 1 Christ, 71 beu the d D 11 b discussed reaching
• i s an alone. will on. 'ivy vitamins C and ) will
e
w<^^s becoming trcad. Toolt hold of God,, and brought Him
Many of us caij remember very 'side and that is all that is necessary It?CIP down; that way!
well the first 'sayer we said although for my salvation."
Drayer „ So many, many hearts have need of
'we cannot, recall the time we were Oh why was 'He theve as the bearer Ch t t Cereal Pudding
taught it at out Mother's oro a e prayer—
Do
of sin,
.. 2 cereal Vs cu wheat Oh, let us pray! ---
are
It on. Jesus thy sus were not laid? cups cooked- p Author Unknown.
IIs we ever stotots think that levee
Oh why from H! side flowed the sin germ, 3 tbsp. sugar, 2 tbsp, corn - h
lire tion} little who have never sV
God cleansing blood, syrup, � cup milk, ik cup oherriee
been taught that there is a candied 3 tbsp, cocoa, DIS MY STRENGTH
Many ayouth who never sees the M If His dying thy'debt has not paid? (candied), GO
y Jesus Christ is our substitute for Mix ingredients and coon' in a
side of a church emane to run up andan set in a. pan with (The following poem was written by
• down the aisles; many a young lean sin- What a wonderful thing it g'r'eased baking pan
h for ns to know that we tlo not need a little hot water in it. SBake until Archdeacon Scott while in' hospital
In lsfe young woman who has no interest mixture is set, in electric oven at in Montreal a year ago.)
g to 'make ourselves petfe t God is any. strength—He underlies
IM life except as far as thin 's of the" 350 deg.
hefm•h It, ns Christ will accent nsl —
Thou white and lovely moon.
Lean close, the night is fading fast,
And daylight comes too soon.'
Lean out from your bejewelled sky
With pale,"gentle hands;
Lean out across the sleeping earth;
Embrace the quiet sands.
Tread lightly on the .sapphire sea,
Let fall your silver gown;
Enchant the forest with he light;
Bewitch the silent town.
Lean close above the trembling
boughs,
Thou white and lovely moon.
Lean close, the night is fading fast,
And daylight comes too soon.
NOT GUIIi51
e...SNAPS
PICTURING SUNBEAMS 33
A medium yellow filter, chrome film, and an exposure of 1/50 second at
f/16 produced this striking picture of sunbeams.
For instanee, if you run across a
cloud -filled sunset scene with a bril-
liant mass of sunbeams breaking
through scattered_ clouds, as in our
illustration, try an exposure of 1/50
second at 4/16. With a filter and
ordinary snapshot film, that should
give you approximately the same
effect our photographer achieved—
although some slight variation, such
as 1/50 second at f/11, may produce
slightly better results. •
However, when it comes to taking
sunbeam pictures in the woods, you'll
undoubtedly need, to give somewhat
longer exposures because the gen- ,
eralsurroundings are so dark in
tone. Exact exposure, data, of course,
will ,dependon the particular con-
ditions, bur 'usually 1/25 second" at
f/5.6 or 4/6.3 will. be About right..
So the next time you see a mass
of sunbeams, don't just pass them
by. photograph them, and you'll find
that! these novel pictures will 811 a
definite spotin your album.
YOUR camera is quite capable of
picturing sunbeams --and solve
of the most striking pictures ever
taken have included them.
Wherever' the rays of sunshine
slant through clouds, a tree, or
other openings, you may find the
setting for a sunbeam picture. If,
there is dust or smoke in the air,
so much the better—the shafts of
sunlight will glow even more bril-
liantly.
Any snapshot, of course, may cap-
ture some feeling of the sunbeams,
but if you really want to emphasize
them—and build 'them into an .in-
tegral part of your picture—the trick
is to increase the general contrast
of your snapshots. Let the darks go
darker, and the lights shine more
brilliantly. And then the shafts of
sunlight will be sharp and clear.
To produce that effect, I'd suggest
that you do two things: First, slip
a medium yellow fllter over your
camera lens; and, second, exoose.for
the highlights' and let the shadows
shift for' themselves.
John van Guilder