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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1928-11-29, Page 7TUE CLINTON NEWS-RgcoRri llM!.11aliolls• of 'Reball A Column Prepared Especially for Women-. Ent Not Forbidden to Me J Is "life worth living?" Aye, with the best of us, Heights of us, depths of us, :Life is the test at us. A discussion as to .which is the happier, men or women, has been go- ing on in some magazines iecentlY and many and varied are the opinions :given, generally corresponding with the sex of the writer, although, usu- ally, men, even though they say; wo- men should be happy, let fall some word which reveals the truth that he is migthy glad that he isn't a woman, Men and women are so different in -some ways that, while both are hu- man and have the same human needs, yet depend -upon different things for happiness, Then, too, what mattes one man or woman happy would not 'tit all satisfy another man or woman. But I think' alni;ost . anyone will "agree that this is pretty much a plan's world; that circumstances fav- or him, give him a freedom to pick :and choose, to frame out his;own.life and build his own career according. to his own will, and that, to creatures •of freewill, is a great boon. I'm not "complaining against the fate that made me a woman, butJhad I bean a 'man`I would have planned,•my life. very differently and would have found, perhaps not more happiness, but at least more satisfaction in fol- lowing my own bent than I have in going the way convention decrees that women should go. This I say even while I have for years followed some extent, at least, my bent and haped my own career. A young man said to me not long go, a man, too, who, did not seem to e greatly gifted either in talents or ecomplishments, that he was heart- ly glad'he was not a woman. Ile thought women bad a very hard and nsatisfatcory part to play in life. is is, of course, the idea which we have been installing into the minds of boys down through the ages. It helps them to take the hard things which come to them in the best spirit and iso encourages chivalry to the weak sex. When a father wishes to each his boy to be brave and take, his :pocks, he tells him "not to be a issy." And, while almost every -girl '11 sometimes dress up as a boy and Ty to adorn the part, no boy ever resses up as a girl for any other eason than to make himself comic or rotesque. tit, after all, women have their work in the world and are not ntircly without means of liiappiness. ost normal women find their harml- ess in making others happy, which s certainly a rather high order of happiness: 1 think women are in the way of finding a fuller, more com- prehensive life than they, have had in the gages gone, and the full life is the happy one., I am not one of those who go to the extreme and think wo- men should shake themsevves free of all their responsibilities and livee sel- fish self-centred lives. But they (, Y should have the opportunity of devel- oping their perso nghties ofdemon- strating demo - stratinb that they are rational thiik- ing human beings, just 'es men have. It will be better for the race when this comes to he the rule. Just now we are in the transition period, when women are adjusting themselves to this new'freedoxn, and some have be- come intoxicated with the idea and say and do things for which they are not fully responsible. 'It will take a generation or. two for women to ad- just themselves to the new idea that they are really possessed of some brains and that their opinions on any matter except the cooking of a din- ner or the minding of a baby is of any importance. But it will work out in time. -But as to whether :men or women, are the happier,who, can say,? What domy readers think? As the Christmas season is coming and as chicken has tc a large extent, replaced turkey as- a holiday bird, owing to the scarcity 'of the latter and the vast improvement of the for- mer, during the past few years, I- am giving some ways of cooking chickens so as to make the5h the delicious addition to the, feast which they ought to be. Instead of 'the stuffed and roasted chicken• why not try one of the following ways of cooking, contributed by, Prof. and Mrs. W. A. Maw of Macdonald Col- lege, Ste,' Anne de Bellevue, Quebec: Chicken A La "Wamac" (Cooked in the oven) Dress, clean and cute chicken in pieces suitable for serving. Dip in milk, sprinkle with salt and roll in soft stale bread "crumbs. Place in a well greased dripping -pan,. skin side down, cover tightly and bake in the oven. Turn pieces at the end of ten Minutes. Foy birds_ weighing 1% lbs. cook for twenty minutes in a very hot oven (500 degrees F.) For birds weighing over 114 lbs. add ten minutes to the cooking time for each additional to lb. in weight. Birds weighing 'over 11t lbs. should be cooked in very hot oven (500 degrees) for fifteen minutes when the tem- perature -should •be reduced to 400 degrees. Remove cover to complete browning. Garnish and serve with a Best . for cool mornings Cooks fn 211: to g minutes' ,4er 11515 Kickinga Tire isnor 4%101 to test t�• NLY a pressure gauge can ever give you a true indication of inflation. There is a correct pressure for -your tires. It de- pends on the size of the tire and the wheel koad. At that pressure your tires will give you maXi- xnum mileage. If your tire inflation goes three —„ pounds below that correct pressure you cut mile- age from the life of your tires. Use a gauge. Better still, drop in at a Dominion Tire Depot once a week and have every tire inspected, and the pressure checked. Let an expert search for cuts and bruises. Often a slight repair will prevent a blow-out. You are never far away from a. DOMI CLINTON( J. W. ;Elliott TIRE T 235 LONESBORO J. C. Radford TIiUItSDA3t', NOVEMB.EIR 29, 1925 sauce made as follows: There .should` be two tablespoonfuls of ,fat in the pan 'add two: tablespoon- fuls flour and seasoning, stir well together, then add one cupful' of hill Stir and cook until thickened, This recipe can be 'used for pre- paringvarying sizes of chiclten'rang- ing from the 'squab broiler' to the light roaster of -three and one half pounds. The length of period :for cooking varies : with the weight of Variations— Roll in cracker crumbs and grated cheese (four parts crumbs to one part cheese) instead of bread crumbs. BROILED CHICKEN Order chicken split for broiling. Singe, wi e, sprinkle with tth.salt and place on a well -greased broiler. Broil twentypainover utas a cleat fire, watching carefully ,and turning broilers so that all parts may be browned The flesh side ,needs the longer exposure to,the fire. The satin side cooks quickly and then is liable to burn. Remove' to a hot platter, spread with soft -butter andsprinkle with salt. Garnish with strips of crispbacon and parsley. So `much attention is required for broiing• a .chicken that the work is often simplified by placing the chick- en in a dripping -pan, skin side down, sprinkling with' salt, dotting over with butter and cooking fifteen min- utes in 'a hot oven (400 degrees Fa- hrenheit), then removing to a broiler to finish the, cooking. .- MARYLAND CRIC$EN x' Dress, clean and disjoint one half; broiler. Sprinkle with salt, dip in flour, egg (slightly beaten and dilut- ed with two tablespoonfuls cold water or olive oil), and soft stare bread crumbs. Place in,'a well greased dripping -pan and bake twenty to thirty minutes in a hot oven (400 de- grees to 450 degrees Fahrenheit), basting after the first five minutes of cooking with two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Arrange on serving dish, garnish and pour around,one- half cupful of White Sauce made' as follows:— Mich one tablespoonful butter, add one tablespoonful flour and season- ing and pour on gradually while stirr ing constantly one half cupful of thin cream or milk. Cook until thickened. REBF.IKAU Countg News WINGRAM: A tragically sad affair happened on Saturday evening when Donald Earl Clark Radford, a three year old son of Mrs. J. Radford, died very suddenly from effects of eating some pills which he mistook for candy: The little chap soon lost consciousness, when his mother called a neighbor who summoned a doctor, but his efforts were in vain, death coming in a very short time. 'There is much of real tragedy and sorrow in this unfortunate affair, and the sympathy of the community goes out to the bereaved mother and family.— Winghani Advance -Times. GODERICH:' Bell Bros., of Por- ter's dill, contractors for the cement sidewalks, have suspended operations for this year. Over three miles of walks have been laid since August 1. There are still several streets petition- ed for.by the ratepayers and passed by the council,'which must wait till Spring, owing to the unfavorable weather conditions, GO TO BED AT 10.35 IN TORONTO .-WAIKL TIP THE NEXT MORN- ING IN SUDBURY Via Canadian National you may leave Toronto- at 10.85 p.m. and ar- rive in Sudbury at 7.45 a.m. After a comfortable night's sleep, you rise rested and` refreshed, ready to con- duct the business of the day. :Return- ing train leaves Sudbury nightly ex- cept Saturday, for Toronto at 9.30 pin., arriving at 7,10 ,the next morn- The trains between Toronto and Sudbury are of standard Canadian National equipment, including sleep - frig cars, ensuring the best of ser - Vice throughout. On Sunday nights from Toronto and on Sdturday nights from Sudbury,. the through sleeper is attached to "The Confederation" leaving Toronto at 9.00 p.m., or leaving Sudbury at 10,55 p.m. Pull information as to reservations, tickets, etc`, from Canadian National. ticket agents. • • 87-1. Joint -Ease For Stiff, Swollen Joints RHEUiVIATIC OR OTHERWISE Says:, "When Joint -Ease Gets in— . -feint Agony Gets Out." It was a high-class pharmacist who saw prescription after prescription fail to help hundreds of his customers toget rid ,of rheumatic swellings and stiff, inflamed joints. And it was this same man who as- serted that a ren edy could and would be compounded' that would make creaky, swollen, • tormented joints work with, just as much ' smoothness as they ever did. • Now this prescription, rightly -nam ed Joint -Ease, after' being tested sue cesefully'on many obstinate • cases, is offered through prog-ressive pharma- cists to the millions of , people who suffer from: ailing ;joints that need limbering up. Swollen, twingy, inflamed, stiff, pain -tormented joints are usually caused by rheumatism, but whatever the cause Joint -;Case soaksright in, through skin and flesh, and gets right to and corrects the trouble at its source. Remember Joint -Ease is for ail- ments of the joints, whether in ankle,. knee, hip, elbow, shoulder, spine or.. finger, and when yourub5 on, yen may ,expect speedy and gratifying re- sults. It is now on sale at druggists ev- erywhere`for 60 cents a tube. ZURICIi: His Lordship Bishop 'Fallon of London announced further appointments in the diocese of Lon- don this week: Rev. A. Stroeder of Zurioli will go to Maidstone and Rev. L. Power of Sarnia comes to Zurich.' I-IENSALL: Thi funeral of Miss: Pena Swan, :who died in London on Thursday, following an attack of pneumonia, was held on Monday af- ternoon from the residence of her sis- ter, Miss Idelon Swan, Honsall and inteimenii made in the Union cem- eteryhere. acre. M iss Swan, h w wowas a{ former employee of the City of Lan- don, was a daughter of the late Thomas. Swan of Usborne township. Shehadbeen in a o f 11 n health Atli f g or some time, 'Besides her sister,' she is survived by one brother,her Johnf A Usb erne. HOG SHIPMENTS IIDNTS Report of Hog Shipments for, month ending October 31, 1928. Clinton—Total hogs, 882; Select ba- con, 299; Thick smooth, 321; heavies, 13; '.Extra heavies, 2; Shop hogs, 11; Lights and Feeders; 2. Londesboro-Total hogs, 78; Select bacon, 27; Thick smooth, 46; Heavies, 2; Lights and Feeders, 2. Brucefield-Total hogs, 76; Select • bacon, 20; Thick smooth, 49; Heavies, 4; ' Shop hogs, 1. Huron County—Total hogs, 6625; Select bacon, 2180; Thick smooth, 3936; Heavies, 148; Extra heavies, 7; Shop Hogs, 123; Lights and Feeders, 124. CANADIANS TURN TO FLORIDA FOR A CAREFREE WINTER SEASON • Semi -tropical Florida • is again' drawing large numbers of Canadians for the winter .season. It is becom- ing more popular every year—prin- cipally because it is so near, its clim- ate is so inviting, and A offers such an array of interesting sports and pastimes peculiar to -that part of the. country, Where else but Florida can one en- joy better such an exciting novelty as Tarpon fishing .. or aqualplaning or speed -boating ... or polo. Where else can one motor for miles through avenues shaded by graceful palms—by great citrus groves of rip- ening ,oranges and lemons -or along the shore of the Atlantic. There's golf, too—all winter long, Arrange now to spend your winter months in Florida—Any Canadian National Railways Agent will gladly supply you with information about rates, routes and its resorts. 87-1. WROXI TER: Mrs, Milton Ed- several years her death came sudden- -made in the' he oke eo jCoted Pyr rilunson died at her home hero Sun, iy, A priygte funeral was ]geld `on Rey.. Bolingbroke day. . Although in failing health '` TnbbXoko condtieted tial g for � 1 nesdly afternoon; interment being services. a es. 15 -lube Ratleryless Console $285 Complete 6 -lube Ballagless Compal $175 Complde thelow Cost1 a f Westinghouse arca Your net will meter ?;show to w a saving of nearly 80% • under the operating cost forbatteries and battery charging. You can enjoy the world's finest and highest paid en- tertainment the year `round witha WestinghouseBattery. less Radio, at less cost for current than the price of c& single "13" Battery. Full 6 -tube power using the new Westinghouse A.C. Radiotrons. UX226, UY227, UX171A. Distant stations brought in with ease and clarity. < True-to-life tone quality, as created in the studio. No distor- tion on high or low notes. If it's in the air a Westinghouse will get it. Offered in both compact and `console models at prices so moderate they set a new. standard of radio value. Quality guaranteed by the name ``Westinghouse"••Pioneers in Radio. Come in and; hear this wonderful instrument, and judge its merits for yoursc(f. We will gladly glee you a demonstration. AUTHORIZED WESTINGHOUSE DEALERS For Batteryleas, Battery and the Full Line of Radiola Models • • T. J. llc1UIL Pianos and Radios Phone 273, Clinton WHEN YOU BUY WESTINGHOUSE YOU OWN THE WORLD'S MOSTADVANCED RADIO a (Xse evr 4 of evr 1 t ist ry a fix in the price Menge o tke four A Chevrolet Motor Company of Canada, ,Limited, announces The Outstanding Chevrolet t of Chevrolet "' History .. a Six in the price range of the four Spectacular as Chevrolet's achievements have been in the past . notable as its engineering triumphs have proved themselves to be -this remarkable new car dwarfs every previous Chevrolet accomplishment. Notouly.does it intro- duce into the low-priced, field an entirely new measure of performance, comfort,' beauty and style --but it is sold at prices so low as to .alter every previous conception of motor The new six -cylinder valve -in -head enghte—developed ,from more than a • hundred motors designed especially for this sensational car—stands out as an engineering masterpiece. With a power increase of. approximately 32% over -the previous Chevrolet motor, with sensationally greater speed and faster acceleration—it offers a type of performance that is literally astound- ing .' even to those who have been: driving cars costing hundreds of dol- lars more. The Roadster The Phaeton The Coach Throughout the entire speed range, it performs with a smoothness and quietness of operation that have never be• fore been approached in a low.priced automobile. At the slower speeds of city traffic it idles along with wonderful silence and ease. On boulevards and country roads it responds with an eagerness that is a constant delight. It takes the longest and steepest hills with an abundant remove of power that is a source. of pride to the driver. Attdits economy of operation averages better than 20 miles to the gallon of gasoline! $6,65: . 11865" . $770 The Coope . . i $760 The Sedan . . . $870 The Spore Cabriolet 4885 The Convertible landau $925 Light Delivery Chassis ,$510 1'/ Ton Chassis . , $69 4111rt t ar-Factory, Oshawa coy cro ,,cs,t Tazts Extra In appearance, this Outstanding Chev- rolet is so =tart, so stylish and so die- tinctively appointed that .it rivals' the costliest custom creations. The new Fisher bodies are longer, lower and roomier with adjustable driver's seat in alt closed models --and reveal the matchless artistry of Fisher designers. You are cordially invited to visit our showroom and secure complete, and dotailed information on this ram- tional new car which will be reedy for •delivery beginning January let. c-a.t-ti-as �k'i•1: o .PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS ��j4J�.,.. lMOF CANADA, LIMILIMITED•- .LOsiemnTiMNiNua ehoseIiin;:s s......ver %C�"4e m W5A.n1RS:VY:K�rJVNdl�11bPffiYl gym.<mnac_marniam r:>Kizsr•.3a.,vm xa�am