HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1941-11-20, Page 7e
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THLTRS., NOV. 20, 1941
THE CLINTON NEWS -RECORD
HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS
CARE OF CHILDREN
COOKING
PAGE '7
HEALTH.
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How
foods
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ested �+,
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,_�
Recipes" i
� I.
i
H. ,r .«. „� '.Y+Wi.+r, .SM+,
. • • •
Planning, cooking and serving :nut-
g, g g'
meals nutter "blitzkrieg" conn_
s g
is one of the many difficulties
housewives in' Britain' today.
to supplement the rationed
with those more plentiful that
""
�""^`"
• "�
,
r Lite-- Success r Failure
••••• 13y "PEG'
..-
�•t `�
g , �
NEALTN se ri=ce ov
T.FIE CANADIAN MEDICALr
ASsoc1ATION
wise included. It is estimated that
over 98% of all mills stow sold in
02ttaria for consumption in the flu-
id state is pasteurized. To do this
313 licensed) plants are necessary ---a
figure probably
f} re xababl iiiore than double tlhat
„�,�,
Padat:eWslci, the world famous pia-
..., •,,,�
week passes,. Later' it comes to US
ANO LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANIES
IN CANADA c
for the rest of the D'07111n10n. lJ7f:P1
to beQ have been moo -mitered, Was
to
compliment of
ural, replging .t° a p
(,tlzeen Victoria said, `Before I was
a enitrs, I was a d2udg'e'. Drudge
g' g
ora worst meaning the same tiling is
the source of every successful life,
Paul Whiteman tells of how he
wanted to play the violin. His father
finally consented to his taking les
SOUS', and bought hits an instrument.
Pike so many others he soon learned
that he wanted to be able to play, but
did not want to practise. Frequently
nthe baso-
Pg
he would sli out And :Ili
bail nine ina nearby ld.To hiswork,
sorzowhisfatheri'ohtnt out, The:
result was a good sound tlnashing.
That punishment Paul Whiteman Ile-
dares was the beginning of any sec-
cess which he attained in life. he
tells of how his father steed over him
`ilea neclduring his to tandise hosn, until he over hhnseif,
whip
in hand. Have we aver made our-
selves do things we would' rather not
do. If so we will have found it no
easy task, but when the work is corn-
pleted it will mean a step up in our
lives.
We have before tis two objectives
in life—success or failure—and' it is
within the power of each one of us
to attain that objective. It is true
that success means a great Ileal of
with a basic that
w s ab we had• almost. en -P
tixely, forgotten that we had anything
to view at all, It is true we make
r istakee. If we are industrious' en-
sigh to find. out why we made those
mistakes, those same errors, in all
will becoino sten
probability, ping
stones on which we may go of build-
ibg toward our objective. ,
hero is an Old. proverb, true in-
deed, which says "Nothing venture;
nothing have. It is'air easy thing to
sit idly by and watch some one else
but what profit do we expect to
receive from that? Success means a
great deal of stepping out into the
dark, but if we place our hand in
God's hand, we need have no fear of
failure. Success in some form or
another will be reached. One of the
surest was to fail is either not to trytion
yap
at all or else to put forth, an effort
in our own strength. God is the God
of success and He will us on,
Never consider for one instant that
failure can have anypartat
in aux lives,
One big factor 9n the successful
The world ing ttoaa our plans is Patience.
would never have
seen'the advancement in electricity;
the progress in xnedicine or surgery;pasteurized
P gl
the planning of architecture or any of
greatincial
the other discoveries had it not
been for the patience those
Ozvtal}o is to ,be congratulated on
being the first large area in the Brit-
ish Empire to introduce compulsory
pasteurization, it is to be hoped that
others will soon follow its example, a
says an editorial in the current issue
of the British Medical Journal, The
editorial reads:
"In; 1.938 the Province of Ontario,
convinced that further progress in
renderin • t ixe milk su t 1
1P Y
safe' needed something snore than vol-
untary effort, decided upon compel-
eery legislation. An amendment to
the Public Health Act was therefore
introduced malting pasteurization
compulsory in all cities and towns ir-
respective of the sizes of the popula-
Provision was also made foreradication
plying the Act by Order in C'ouaicil
-Ito
to any other area recommended by the
Minister of Health. The purpose of
this clause was, of course to bring in
a later date rural areas,pleasure
resorts and other placers that were
liken y to present special dif£ieulties
at the start. one importantconbeing
feature
°f the Act is the reguirment that
all milk must be P
in Tants
that have been approved by the Prov-
De
Department of Health and that
a
expected; but on_
le -
re the whole pro
gross has been remarkably rapid and
opposition has not been serious. By
exonerating local authorities from the
necessity of deciding for or against
pasteuxizati:on—a decision that had
formerly to be taken b bodies' lar
larg-
Y g-
ely untrained in public health methods
q and by insisting on uniform xe-
111 110 ents for all pasteurizing plants
in the Province, it has removed two
important obstacles to a progressive
program of milk control. The dif-
tY p g 1 Y popttla•o
ficul of rovidin • s nar•selHere
ted rural areas' with adequately pas-
teurized mills is proving by no means
insuperable. Plants have been este,-
bushed at convenient centres from
which milk can be delivered over re-
latively wide areas. It is as yet too
early to say what the effect on the
of milk -borne diseases is
likely to be, but it is interesting to
note that the typhoid fever death
in 1939 was halved, that cases of un -
dulant fever .were reduced .by about
out
tib /r and that a substantial tldminu-
,
tion Was a
apparent in the infantile
mortality Tato. Ontario is to be
congratulated on the first large
g
area in the British Elnp}xe to intro -
duce compulsory pasteurization. It
is to be hoped that others will soon
follow its example.
TLIIS MODEST CORNER J 3 �uDICATEIi
�7••yq' y, t'g��CY�
T® TJCAE POETS
will still provide the family with the
necessary requirements? How best
t0 cook these foods to preserve the
precious vitamins and minerals?
How to Ilan her meals to save tante
1
They Wil Sing 'ou Their Songs---Sometimesfew
�iraST, Sometimes Sad—gills Atrvays Ile�pf�ll
and Inspiring.
fuel and labour? These are but a
of the gnestiotls that mast arise.
Ta aid the housewives with these
problems of maintaining national
health and well being, and thus aid
heal tt in her wax effort, many war-
THE CHALLENGE
The Homemakers Page in the Tor-
Globe and Mail contained refer-
to the passing of Miss H. I.
raham of Seaforth recently: "But,
et before she embarked, Miss Gra-
left a challenge to tate youth of
day. We were saving it for some
when we had space for a longer-
an -usual poem, and think we must
anage to find that space today to
her message when she herself
gone. That, we feel sure, is what
would have wished and what site
accomplished—to leave some good
at will live after her.
The Challenge
the challenge of the future
the today,
A little stool to rest her feet upon,
A bedroom to herself, an easy chair,
A robin strutting of a friendly lawn.
A table set with home-grown lovely
food,
A kettle singing gaily on the hearth
A little boy, a dog, a fishing rod,
The greening fields, the wholesome.
smell of earth.
A man and women living out theiry
lives
In happy toil, secure from bombs
above,
A small world bounded by a picket
fence,
With peace to sanctify and bless their
love,
—Edna Ja u
• • q es
time recipes have been collected, -
lished and distributed. From one of
these British wartime booklets the
Consumer Section, Marketing Service,
Dominion Department of Agriculture
has taken and tested the following• re-
eipes, 0011 passes them on to Canadian
homemakers who are looking for ec-
oiomictl food dishes these clays:
Lentil Soup
'�s pound lentils
2 carrots
2 small turnips
1 onion
2 tablespoons fat
2 quarts water or stock
Salt and pepper
Wash the lentils. Cut the vege-
tables into small pieces. Melt the fat,in
hard work, but who is there of us
of who
spent years in making
yearly certificate of approval must
be obtained fcr•
who would rather -work than belong
to the class of failures. Some people
contend that there are more failures
life than successes. It is wiser for
us not to allow our thoughts to drift
along that channel, for what we would
deem a failure, God, in many cases
would call a success. We may never
have our name in any book or paper;
We may never be 1 novits beyond our
own little community; in fact the four
walls o£ our home may forst the
greater part of our lives, and yet in
some far distant h1nc1 some Inessen-
a success of
their dreams. Their dreams did not
fade away with the morning light.
No race is ever won by a contestant
who makes a dash when the whistle
blows and then stops. Success is
achieved by that one who "keeps at
it." ;
Let ns suppose that n0 one else was
doing any more to bringa successful
climax to any wont than we are doing.
The Story is toll of a Chinese laund-
ryman. He walked along the street
and saw a sign in a saloon window
, ,
each plant to show
that it is still conforming to the offic-
sal demands. Anyone familiar with
the tack of uniformity of control iii
Great Britain, where pasteurizing
Plants aro licensed by local authori-
ties often having little or no know-
ledge of the important factors comer-
sed, will appreciate the wisdom of
this enactment. Though this •}e"•ia}a-
d
tion has been in operation for only
two years, considerable progress has
g
been made. According to Dr, A. E.
Berry, Director of the Division of
WE ARE PAYING
31/2%
N V YEAR
GUARANTEED
TRUST CERTIFICATES
ISSUED IN ANY
AMOUNT
�.
young people
insistently is calling
ou, to face the awful fray,
ear the bugle call of freedom,
id `a world to mould anew
hat its destiny and history
110±ipen1t whollyupon you,
P
ever came there such a challenge—
a it never come again
Y g
'om the bivouac of battle
id the countless thousands slain—
it with a faint undaunted,
ith a purpose strong and true,
WHAT CAN WE OFFER.
(War Savings Campaign, 1941)
0 England, regnant in thydarkened
g splendour,
p
Shining more brightly since thy
lights were dimmed,
g
What can we offer thee, what trib_
use render?
Por pinnacles o'verthxown and altars
shattered,
stir in the lentils and vegetables.
Cook gently f
g Y or a few minutes with-
out browning then. Add the liquid,
bring to the boil, skits well and aim-
tier• for about two hours, or until all
the ve ' about are tender, Serve the
g
soup either sieved or unsieved.
Note,—A bone for a piece of hath
°r boiled bacon will gretttlV improve
the flavour of the soup, Put it in
with the vegetables and remove be-
fore serving,
ger of )esus Christ may be saying.
„ Tf it were not for the influence of1d7
my father or mother, sister of broth-
er, T would certainly not be out at-
tempting to (10 Gods work, I know
pbage lat raye eistnacemdingd me ator the cthronenof ly
God on m behalf." No one who can
Y
pray to God need ever consider him-
self a failure. Success, at times, be-
Neves• closa'c1",t Further ;along a
drug store displayed an advertize-
merit "epen all night."• It was not
•longtill a notice a
appeared in the ruin_
deof the laundry "Me wakes too,"
Just how wide awake are we anon
the line of success? Success cannot
be attained by those who spend their
them sleeping,
There is one line of work in which
Sanitary Engineering in the Ohtario
Department of Hearth, 27 cities and
P y muter
towns came automatically
the ACI. Seven different Orders in
Council have since been passed tie_
signaling. villages, townships, and
rural areas. All villages and police.
villages of 500 inhabitants or over
have been brought under the Act, and
many smaller communities are Iiite-
An ideal authorized investment
for individuals, companies, ceme-
tery boards executors and other
trustees.
STERLING CORPORATION
CORPORAY iON ,
37E BAY ST. TORONTO
the world's regeneration,
1 your God and country tea,
ke tlieu eseen and1lpriest5ned dof elan'
proclaim the Lord's Anointed
id display Ilia banner bold.
your eye upon Immanuel,
your Christian armour bright
r the New Day that is coming
of this—earth's darkest night.
. Isabel Graham, Seaforth.
---,_.
For little houses tumbled into dust,;
For homes forlorn and little children
scattered,'TRE
We pledge to thee our service and
our trust'
For new -made graves amid thine an.
tient landmarks,
For unknown graves in the sur-
rounding deep;
For tireless eyes that watch thine
y
island' bulwarks
And watching have, bereaved, no
time
• Bubble and Squeal:
1 pound1 001111' cold bo led potatoes
1 small 0oohed onion
1 medium sized cooked carrot
4 tablespoons fat
Salt and pepper
Chop the cabbage, onion and carrot,
and also the potato if not already
mashed. Malt the fat in a frying an,
and fry the onion and carrot lightly,
fans in our minds as something which
is far
we should never sleep—That is the ,
off we can visualize ourselves
working years to attain some objet-
give, Man of us before we have of
Y
anywhere our •aim •have felt • the bel-
den too heavy and have laid down
our tools right in the pathway of
someone else and those same tools
have become
Lord's work, It is claimed that the
state has fallen short in concluding"®"•""�
this war, that it must be done b the
church. Amazement and a thorough
feeling of discouragement accompan-
res that statement. If the church is
to win, victory seems a long way off
/,�
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CONTINUITY
5
1
'f ..or GuIL
R e
1 N TI -I [ ALBUM
;
TO THE R.A.F.
ver since English ships trent but
Co singe the beard of Spain,
English sea -dogs diced with death
klong the Spanish Main;
ver since Drake and Raleigh won
to weep;
For gallant sons who gaily ride the
heaven
To hurl the rude intruder from the
skies;
Or
Or sail courageously, by' duty driven,
The foe -infested sea that round
but do not brown them. Adel the
other vegetables and season well.
Stir until thoroughly heated. Place
an enaine1 plate on the top of the
pan and leave for a few minutes' until
the mixture has browned uilderneatln•
a Stumbling block for
r,
our brother or sister, Who is follow-
for there are thousands o£ people
throughout
FAMILY is •a
ing after us. The trouble with the
majority of us is that we often in-
tend to do something, but each day
our intentions move on a clay until a
our own land who never
enter a church. We believe that elle
war' fres been caused be carie
have wandered people
d away from God and
we must, absolutely must, conte .back
to Him before we can expect to'
album family iti• s
tory—or should be and for
that very reason a well-kept,the'well-
rail
tiled album is one of the most
treasured family possessions, The
pictures need not be works of art)ta
—if they simply a
k t }
t „µ
? i
r freedom of the seas,
ve sons of Britain dared and done
Bore valiantly than, these,
tether at midnight or at noon,
rhrough mist or open, sky,
71'es of freedom, all our hearts
ire up with yeti on high;
tile Britain's mighty ghosts look
down
Torn realms', beyond the atm,
d whisper, as their record pales,
['heir breathless, (leen, Well done!"
Alfred Noyes..
__e_
theee-iIles;
For all the Liberty which we inherit—
The Liberty we pray our sons may
share—Tun
We swear that neither failure nor
demerit
Of ours shall add one little to thy
Y
caret
That we shall give, who have so much
to proffer
Of gifts, of labor and of enterprise,
For, those who have not feared to of-
fer
That we may see the
Weep not: they are in God's care
today,
Better far to be an airman brave
than to be a Nazi slave,
A silver Iining soon will shine your
way.
Destruction great, a mound of steel
and rubber,
A shining monument to American
men,
Men of might and men of brains who
look not for trouble,
But men who would live to see pease
upside down onto the plate, and
serve very hot. •
claim,
any victory
Take for instance in our church
work, if no one did any more in the
provide clea
cut record of the family's life, Its
members and its activities, that is
sufficient.
Any first-rate album picture tells
' ` r
1
\�� c
t ,
Red Cabbage and Apple
1 good sized'red cabbage
1 lar i le
tablespoons
3 tablespoons brown sugar
1 dessertspoon •vinegar
Salt and pepper
Wash the cabbage and cut it into
quarters, removing the hard stalls and
ribs. Cools in a very little boiling
salted water to which the vinegar
and brown sugar have been added.
feel the apple and cut it u p and add
it to the cabbage. Cook for about 45
minutes or until the cabbage is ten-
der. Drain well and serve very hot.
Oatmeal Biscuits
1 2-3 cups oatmeal
cup sugar
6 tablespoons fat
flour
31� tablespoonsThis
Cream fat and sugar till verysoft.
Mix m the flour Form;
Lord's work than we are doing how
would' FT}s work s
many of us are concerned then hutcas h
v
eloors wouldi be closed and with the
closing of the churches he would conte
practically an era of heathendom.
The religion a£ Jestts Christ is the
best thing which can be offex•ed to us.
Let Its accept the res
P responsibility which
God has given
that Pia has thous and Ecol • gnateful
sen us to be a co-
worker with Ii}m. Will Nyenot right
ii Get back lives? Cod and manse a
success of our lives?
My Task
To
To love some one more dearly"why"
every
.. day
To help a wandering child to find his
tray,
To ponder o'er a noble thought and
'pray ' � !
And smile when evening falls,
ism task.
To follow truth as blind men novo for
you a number of things, It is like
a mows item, whose first paragraph
gives the "who, what, when, where,
why, and how" of am event. If your
album pictures answer these queQ
tions, or most of them, they will
be thoroughly satisfactory.
livery good, clear picture tolls
the —you can easily recognize
the people in it. It may also tell
,
"where"—by including a familiar,
recognizable scene. However, the
"when' is sometimes missing. The
subjects' costumes may indicate I11
in a general way—but you should
also note down the data under the;"'t
also
when you puce it in the
album.
Often, too, pictures don't explain
or "how" Why was the plc-
tore taken? What was going on'
It you were on an outing, why dont
pictures show what you did n
nncitih s 15 picture
nom especially important in
family album shots.
'Continuity is important, too. The
album is a continued story, day to
clay and year to year. Don't leavers'.
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ARMY MAIL
u should' see that boyish grin
len
ren the army mail comes' in,
d the }ads who get the letters look
so gay:picture
t is really is to bad
see the face of some poor lad,
reit the Poetic says "There's' none
for you today,"
Dawn arise!
--Grace Pollard' in Montreal Star.
THE WRECK OF ,
THE AMERICAN
ATItLTNFS TRANSPORT AT
SHEDDEN
The following lines were composed
P
by H. Hoover, an employee at the
Centralia Airport, following the
crash of the big
ante again.
Brave airmen, your mission at end,
But airmen still will carry on your
task.
Your duty clone, God's blessing will
Y g
attend,
And in His heavenly sunshine you Will
bash.
—H' hoover, Ex Pte. Co, 2
1d them cigarettes and sweets,the
d lots of wholesome. eats;
transport liner near
St. Thomas recently.<,„
+
"`—
ONLY A VOLUNTEER”
d never let them think they've been
let down
td them cookies, sometimes candy,
d good magazines are dandy,
t BE SUILEI to send them news
from their home town,pilot
get busy, do some 'writingTo
the lads who do your fighting
your bit and send them something,
nor bfail.
lie days are dark and dreary,
d they oftentimes are Weary,
hustle up and catch the early snail.
—Lillian Melville; Toronto; Ont
Thera she lies, a tivistod wreck of
ruin,
A noble ship that flew • our brave
p
A trustworthyerican skies,
_ and to aviation
' a real boon
our defence a hero where our flag
>
j of freedom flies.
Brave men who care not for sullen
! sky,
f $rave men, whose wish it is to do pl
dr°•
Al°t death in that' furnace of
Far from the hearth and homepwhere
(Sent byniPte. Gerald 3101(10 and
written by a Camp Friend)
Why didn't I trait to be diaftecl''
To be lead to the train b the baud;
Y
And put in a claim for exemption,
Oh, why diel I put up my hand.
•
Why didn't I wait •for the banquet,
Why didn't I wait to be cheered,
Far the drafted men get all the credit
While iilere'1 T volunteered.
And nobody gave us a banquet,
Nobody gave us a kind word,
The' puff of the engine, the grind of
the wheels,
Was all the good-bye that we heard
and 'oatmeal.
into a square i
and roll out / inch
thick. Cut into squares or fingers.
Bake in a moderately hot oven till
set
light,
To do m y best from datvtn o£ da till
Y
night,
To keep my heart fit for His bol
sight, y
And ons+wer when he calls.
broad gaps in it—include the every -
day happenings ars well as the big
Family eventQ, If you have children,
include a month-to-month record of
Choir gtowtli—with a familiar liacis-
ground as 'measuring rod" And
arrange the Pictures in Proper or -
„ „
Grewing•up shots, such as this,
lend continuity t° an album. Take
them frequently --put a "story"
into each of your other album
shots—and write the date under.
Raisin Cake
2 2-3 cups flouu
12 tablespoons 'brotablespoons, fat wn g)_
6 oz. raisins
1 tablespoon marmalade
1/. teaspoon mixed spice
1 teaspoon baking powder
1� cup mills
Mix the flour, spice and halting
powder. Rub in the fat and add the
other dry ingteclienis. Stiff in the
marmalade and mills, Mix well to -
gather, and bake in a grossed tin in
a moderate for 1Y
That is my task.
"PEG"
`y
�, _
RE HAPPY!
To be happy, we are told, we
should make others ha PPD,
We'll help you to be happy.-.
If your subscription is its ar-
rears, pay it ---you can be asset-
ed of our happiness! , . , ,
The i
�. New9"IeC01'i
der as you take them, so the story,
will run smoothly,
I have a friend who maintains
his album in this manner, First, he
shoots at least one roll of family
pictures every single week—some-
times more, but always a minimum
of Dna Pull sets
Then 111 aside one $alfdtour
each weals ict the album, He Sneerer
the new pictures in their proper
places—writes the date under each
—adds any explanation that's need-
ed—and the job is done. It takes
but a short time, yet it keeps his
album neat, complete, and strictly
up-to-date.
There's a lot of satisfaction in
each one,
such a "family history t boons"—and
you can have one just as easily as
anybody else. All you Hoed is t° put
in a Few odd minutes each week,,
and arrange your snapshots accord,.
ing to an orderly plan.
Pictures in correct order—with
the date and any other and inEooiy
tion under each ono—and "story"
•
itt every shot, That's the tem'
for a useful,informativea1album
that you will treasure in years to
come—and now is the time to start
keeping your album along those
lines.
328 John van Guilder
CIVILIZATION
little zone of safety fox• a child
ere he sort play with none to do
him harm;
all creeks to wade, a sunny hill to
climb,
a quiet homely shelter of a farm.
warm nook for a mother old and
• frail;
children cry.
It is these men who build our mighty
States,
Who help to keen the freedom which
we hold so dear.
Our prayers arise to Heaven's pearl,
gates, y
Por men tike these that have or
know no fear•
B,
Brave widows, Wives of airmen brave,
To keep us for the next half-year
Anr) in the Shuffle I had forgotten
I was only volunteer,
And perhaps some day in the future
When my little •boy sits on my knee
And asks what 1 did in the big war
And his little eyes look up at me
I will have to loons into those eyes
That •at me sa txustin 1
g y peer
A.nd tell him: I wasn't drafted,
I was only
y a volunteer,
oven about hours.