HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1946-04-04, Page 40{
THE
THE SEAFORTHNEWS
THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1946
THE SEA V (,)RT IT NS The evening was spent playing pr•o-
Snowdon Eros.,. 1''ablishe's.. gressive euchre. At the eloee":of the.
euchre, Stanley :Fischet called. the,
WALTON
Address and Presentation '
On Friday, March 29th, a group of
neighbors and friends met in the
Cranbrook Hall to spend a social
evening With Mr. and Mrs. Janes
Keys and family before their depart-
ure to their new home in McKillop.
J. A. WESTCOTT
JEWELLER
Seaforth
RessagemsEMEEMNsliergeigigliM
Keys family' to the platform and read
the following address: To Mr. and
Mrs. Keys and family. Dear friends,—
We your neighbors and friends wish
upon this ocdasionto express to you
our most sincere regret at your de-
parture from our midst, You have
made splendid citizens, helpful and
obliging neighbors and true friends.
Our community has been, enriched by
your pleasant personality •and your
work. You have always been willing
to help iu every way. We shall miss
Your •little family, too, all different,
but equally beloved by us all. How-
ever we are pleased to know that you
are not going so far aWay but that
you can come back to visit us often.
For yon the latch string will always
hang to the outside of the neighbor•
hood. As a small token of our love
please accept this purse with the
combined wishes of each and every
one for . abundance of health, new
friends and prosperity in your future
' home. Signed on liehalf of the com-
munity, Geo. Wesenberg, Stan. Fis-
cher, Cliff Kernaghan, Archie Engel,
Stuart McNair, Earl, Dunn, Tont
Pennington.
Jim replied on behalf of himself
and family, thanking their friends
for their kind wishes and gift, and
honed that they were not going so
far away that they couldn't return
often and that 'their Craubrook
friends couldn't come to see them
often,. Lunch was served, and after-
! wards a short dance was held to the
, music of George and Mrs. Evans and
Stuart McNair.
THE MIXING BOWL
By ANNE ALLAN
Hydro Homo Econo*IN
•
Hello, Homemakers! Do you re-
member 'way back- when bananas
were considered indigestible, partic-
ularly for children? That idea has
been refuted by nutritionists and
pediatricians who to -day reconunend
mashed ripe -bananas as one of the
baby's first solid foods.
More bananas are on the market
this winter than there have been for
a number of years. And while there
is no ,great abundance, even now,
you can occasionally buy enough
bananas for a treat dessert, salad,
cake or pie.
Bananas are sold by the pound,
one pound averaging 4 bananas of
LESS EYE STRAIN
LESS SQUINTING
FEWER WRINKLES
HYDR
1500 HOUR
LA PS
AND SAVE MONEY
BUY THEM AT
YOUR HYDRO CMG
m,
HL 461
RENEWAL OF
N E1` PLOY 11 E NT
RE'r UA'reCE Boas
x�-
To 41 Employers:
All Linin; fu nsnt Insurance Rook, for the. year
en3rn_; It{:rrr_lt ,;1 at, 19 1d. trust be exchanged for
new lesoLs.
Kindly cera n .r =z5 'J + J v•;t11 your nearest
!iatiunr.l its liregit i :vice Office it you have not
Arcady tech:need red yarn• emelo)'ees• hooks.
(There err .'-i '.-m' penalties for b
failing to ?Tulle 1 rr(:Br ployrr'retrt
Insurance corttri but ions for
your insured employees tr:sd,for
failure to renew the Insurance
Books as required.
To All Employees:
If you are an insured person protect your beliefit
by
rights seeing that your Insurance Book has
S
been exchanged,
JNETO. fIVIS '=i T INSURANCE
C XSSX
arc—IW
medium size. If the bananas are Wm. Robinson, Clinton
slightly green, allow them to ripen Funeral services were held in Olin -
at room temperature, not in the re• ton for William Robinson, resident of
Oiinton for more than. 18 years, who
died in London after almost .a year's
illness, Rev. Andrew Lane officiated
at the services. The pallbearers were
two sons-in-law, Charles Cole and
Leonard McKnight, London, Ernest
Brown, Thomas, Deeves, Moffatt Aiken
and •Edward Morrison. Mr. Robinson
was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Robinson, He was born at
Fordwich on May 6, 1870. His early
-education was received there. He had
a groceteria in-Goderich and when he,
came to Clinton he went into the
grocery business. I11 health forced him
to give up his business and for al
while he carried mail on one of the
rural routes. Surviving are his wife,
a son and two daughters.
Drove Mail to Dashwood
For 44 Years
fxtgerator. Cold temperatures pre-
vent proper ripening.
For best eating, infant feeding
and as an ingredient in baking, the
fruit should be yellow, flecked with
brown. At this stage it is sweet and
mellow and thoroughly digestible. A,
banana tipped with green in only
partially ripe; the pulp is firm,
starchy and slightly tart. Such ban-
anas should not be eaten raw.
TAKE A TIP
1. To keep bananas from turning
dark for an hour after slicing, dip
the slices in the juice of grapefruit,
orange or lemon. Use a stainless
steel knife to cut them.
2. To flue bananas for salads, etc.,
run the prongs .of a fork length-
wise down a peeled banana, then
sage crosewrse, After carrying the Dashwood mail
3. To mash bananas :(for cakes, for more than 44 years Mr. Harry
muffins,l,then cookies witheta slice into a Hoffman has retired and his place is
bowl, si .beat a tablespoon ele t- brow taken by Ross Guenther. Mr.
milk, using a rotary beater or elect-
tris mixer. Hoffman made his last trip recently.
fa
weath
and
' For baby's use, press fully rine 1 !Daring rn lir winter during
during li those
wooden
bananas through a sieve with a
years, Mr. Hoffman's slogan has been,
wooden spoon. 1 the mail must go through. In Novem-
BANANA CAKE i bet•, 1901, he began as a bus driver for
21 V. cups sifted cake flour, 2 Mr. henry Guenther, father of Hari
tsps. baking powder, '/r tsp. soda, '4 Guenther, owner of the Guenther
tsp. salt, %. cup shortening, 2 tbsps. Transport. With the coming of the
milk, g. eup fine granulated sugar, motor car Guenther's were among the
1 tsp. vanilla, 2 eggs, 4 cup chopped first to establish a motor bus with
nuts (optional), 1 cup mashed ripe Harry as the driver. With the intro -
bananas (about 3 bananas). duction of rural mail delivery Harry
Sift together the flour, baking carried the mail over the route. Many
powder, soda and salt. Beat shorten- a time in summer when making two
1 ing until creamy. Add the sugar trips to Grand Bend and in winter
gradually and continue -beating un- when the roads were bad sixteen
til light and fluffy. Add vanilla, hours a. day was not infrequent. He
beating thoroughly. Add"eggs one at was ill only once. No matter what tiro
a time, beating after each addition difficulties Harry, always maintained'
until mixture is fluffy. Add chopped a genial disposition and was one of
nuts. Add flour mixture alternately the most obliging persons. He is r
with bananas and milk, starting and widely' known and is going to be
't• 'finishing: with `flour mixture.. When missed on his daily rounds. '
blended pour at once into a greased Goderich Man's Father Flies
aand nd floured
boureke dp cake ann an electric (x 8 2 in.) Out From England
(
(360 Interesting visitors at -the ]tonne of
leg's,) for 50 to 55 mins. Cool on Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Argyle, Britannia
Road, Goderich, are ' the former's
fattier, Samuel Argyle, and the latter's
daughter, Mrs. Stanley Cooper, and
her 15 -months -old son Adrian, of Eng-
land, The party left England at 5 p.m.
on March 21 on one of the new Ameri-
can Constellation planes. They stop-
ped at Shannon, Ireland, for dinner;
had breakfast the next morning at
Gander, Nfld., and landed at LaGuaria
field. New York, at 9 a.m. Mrs. Cooper,
whose husband, Dr. Stanley Cooper,
• is in the colonial Medical service on
the Gold Coast, West Africa, feels
that she accomplished a great deal in
malting the trip, for her father is in
his 7711 year and is crippled, and her
baby Is quite young; but all enjoyed
a very comfortable and "truly marvel-
ous" trip. "The plane journey could
nut have been better or more com-
fortable," Mr. Argyle sr. said. They
stirring occasionally, Beat egg yolks took nil*. he said, 110111 an airfield in
. slightly and add part of hot. mix- Hampshire. Mr,' Argyle sr. was a civil
Lute. Blend and return to double servant with the British Government,
boiler, Gradually add remaining hot ane is a veteran of the Boer War and
mixture. Cook for 2 mins. Remove the First Great War. He was born in
from heat and blend in bnitter. Cool Nottinghamshire, but lived in London
(cover top with wax paper to pre- most of his life and latterly at 811c1 -
vent a skin from forming). Add (Beton-on-Sea • near Bognor, near
vanilla. Fill baked shell with half which Canadians. were quartered 1.01-
of the cream filling. Slice bananas ing the war. He had One reg ampu-
thinly and ennead over filling. Add tared
`n injured Ina motohis 69th r accidenter t, and
remaining filling,
?COTES: 1. A meringue may he
made with the two egg whites and
i tbsns, sugar. Spread over filling
and brown in slow oven (500 deg.)•
2, Chill pie thoroughly before eerv-
ing
CANDIED APPLES
WITH COFFEE SAUCE
8 tart apples, sliced, 1 cup sugar,
1 run water. 2 tsps. orange rind.
Boll sugar, water and orange rind
{ 2 mins. Cook sliced apples with
syrup in a covered dish until they
become transparent. •af more liquid
is necessary, adcl water.) Put in said, but feel they deserve a break,.
nerving dishes and top with coffe She stated that they never knew
sauce. what it was to mave a good ,sound
Coffee Sauce: 1/3 cup sugar, 14 meal on their rations. It is something
ten. salt, 2 tbsps, flour, 1 can cold new to them to have eggs when they
coffee, % ten. vanilla and 1 beaten reel like it, Since the war started,
eisa white. Mix sue'ar, salt and flourbacon and eggs were never served
with the coffe. Stir over low heat together, and the British ration' only
until smooth. Cool to lukewarm, add allowed one egg a week• Mrs, Cooper
vanilla and fold in beaten .egg white. last her horse when it was struck by
a flying bomb.
cake rack. Serve .plain or frost top
of cake with thin layer of icing:
•
BANANA SPICE CAKE
Use above recipe with the addit-
tion of the following spices to the
dry ingredients:
1/9 tsp. cloves, 114 tsp. cinna-
mon, t4 tsp. nutmeg.
BANANA CREAM PIE
1 eight-ihch baked pie shell, 2
cups milk, 2 tbsps. cornstarch, 1y
tbsps, bread flour, 1/3 tsp. salt, %
cup sugar, 2 egg yolks, yt tbsp. but-
ter, 1 tsp. almond or vanilla extract,
2 fully ripe bananas.
Heat ,1% cups of milk in double
boiler. Mix cornstartch, flour, salt
and sugar. Combine with remaining
milk. Add to heated milk and stir
constantly until mixture is thick -
'erred Continue cooking for 15 mins
wears an artificial leg. He hopes to
reside permanently hi Goderich, Pre-
viou:: to 1542, Mre. Cooper was with,
the British AVOW as 0 confidential
seeretery attached to the staff of the.
general offieer•conuranding - in- chief.
From May, 1942, she was executive
secretary to the deputy commissioner
. of the American Red Cross in Britain.
Her baby was born in October 1944.
Living conditions in England, they
said, are as acute as ever, and little
easing is in prospect. There was a
Oreille in. cigarettes. The people in
England are quite "chirpy" dt was
Kincardine Sells Rink —
An agreement has been signed be-
tween the town of Kincardine and
Ripley Woodworkers Ltd., by which
the firm will come to Kincardine-.
Part of the arrangement is for the
sale of the town -owned curling rink
Building to the company..
Engagement --
Mr.
Mr, and Mrs, Cecil Skinner of Cen-
tralia, announce the engagement of
their- eldest, daughter, Beulah Eliza-
beth, to Kenneth Wilbert Clark, eld-
est son of Mr• and Mrs. John Mason,
'Rclgrave, The marriage to take place
in Centralia United. Church; April 10.
To Bufld Up Recreational Centre
A woofing of the Exeter Lions Club
was held recently to consider a don-
ation to the South Huron Agricultural
aociety for the improvement of the
fair grounds. Preston Dearing, of
stepben, produced aplan that when
completed should provide a minimum
its- centre that will meet the needs of
the district. The plan is linked up
with the arena and the school, It pro
• vides for a. grand stand that is now
almost completed; barns for the
horses, cattle, sheep and pigs at fair
time. The ground is to be graded and
seeded. Ball diamonds, a. tennis court,
swings for the children and parking
space for the children and parking
space are included in the plan, To
provide for the recreational facilities
the Lions Club voted $2,000, The
grounds will be ,available for. ;the
pupils at the Exeter school. During
the winter at the noon hour the stu-
dents from the surrounding district
attending the high schobl will have
the use or, the arena gynnw';nrm for
playing basket ball and other eames.
A permanent floor is suggested for
the rink and other fetch -lees made
for the holding of meetings, suppers,
and picnics in conjunction with the
recreational grounds and will be
available a tell reasons of the year.
E G
T THEATRE
-�'
Seaforth
NOW SHOWING Thurs. Fri. Sat., Apr. 4-5.6
TWO FEATURES
Jean Heather Robert Benchley
ALSO "THE NATIONAL BARN DANCE"
Yvonne De Carlo Rod Camer'ofr
"FRONTIER GAL" In Technicolor ,
A swashbuckling saga of the West filled with action, humor,
intrigue and romance
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
William Eythe Lloyd Nolan
HOUSE ON 92ND STREET
An F. B. I, story emphasizing the safeguarding of a secret process.
bearing on the atomic bomb
NEXT THURS. FRI. SAT.
Jeanne Crain Dana Andrews
"STATE FAIR" in technicolor
A musical version of Phil Stong's novel
COMING "THE DOLLY SISTERS"
j 1' CEMETERY MEMORIALS
Now is the season to consider the erection of your
j family memorial.
• • You are invited to consult us when every consideration
f ` will be given: to individual requirements.
SEAFORTH SHOWROOMS are -open each TUESDAY �.
.for your convenience.
/
iT. PRYDE & SON
7 i
I Memorial 'Craftsanen
• EXCTEI2 SEAFORTH CLINTON
See Dr. Harburn for -appointment any other time,
' or phone 41J, Exeter
tco,"�. .a. .a....vaw _ A
This Year Try Sunnyvale Chicks
R. 0. P. Sired Barred Rooks Leghorn x Rook Hybrids
All stock blood -tested against regular and x pullorum
Circular and Price List on request
Sunnyvale Poultry. Farm
Andrew A. Moore, Prop. Phone 666 r 3, Seaforth
Tune in CKNX 19201 Yrogram of Irish Airs. Every Wed., 1 to 1.15 p.m.
5x & 3x Shingles
Electric Fencers, Fence Wire,
Cedar and Steel Fence Posts
Gates
Grass Seed, Seed Corn,
Garden Seeds
Fertilizer, Ceresan
CO - OP FEEDS
Chickstarter Pigstarter
Growmash Hog Grower
Laymash Sow ration
Hatchmash Dairy ration
WESTERN GRAIN AND CHOP
Finns Minerals es Tonics
Reduced Iron, Rex Wheat Germ Oil
Universal Milkers & Parts
Seaforth Farmers
Co-operative
Phone 9
Died At Barrie —
The funeral of Mary Ann Chapman,
wire of the late James Davis, who
died at the house of her daughter, Mrs.
C, F. Smith, Barrie, was held froth
the Hann and .Johnson funeral parlors
in Brussels; interment was in Brus-
eels cemetery. Tito late Mrs. Duvis
was born near Listowel in 1857. She
resided iu Seaforth prior to going to
a farm on the 5thconcession of Mor-
ris in 1885. AI't:er the death of her
husband in 1918 site moved to Barrie,
CHESTERFIELDS &
OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS
Repaired & Recovered
Auto Seats and Backs,
-'rirrrtlr-li Swillgs 4 Steamer
Chain, T1'l'airt>d. Free Pick -
u1) and Delivery•
The
Stratford Upholstering
Company
Phone 579, Stratford
For further information apply .at
Box's Furniture Store
SEAFORTH'
Road To Be Paved —
lVoi'd has been receivedthat, ap-
proval has beeit given by Ontario
Highwdys Minister Doucette for the
paving of a 12 -mile stretch of road
from Kincardine to Amberley. Work
will start soon on the 12 miles of road
from Ambertey south to Port Albert,
which is almost ready for surfacing,
while the Antbenley-Kincardine road
will have' to have more extensive
work dote.
BEAVER SHIPS RETURN: Canada and the
United Kingdom were Linked again by the famous
Beaver line when the Canadian Pacific's new
cargo liner Beaverdell docked at Saint Jolm,
N.B., in Marcia at the end of her maiden
voyage from Liverpool.. The turbo -electric fast
freighter in making her initial crossing of the
North Atlantic in less than seven and one half
days demonstrated the service which will enable
her and three sister ships to replace the origin-
al five vessels of the Beaver class which were
lost during the war. A :fine example of the lat-
est developments in marine design and engineer-
ing, the Beaverdell features widespread use . of
electrical installations. Her propelling unit is •
turbo -electric, in which steam generated electric-
al ower at high voltage drives the motor which
i 191, 1: c propeller shaft, Electric win hes also
„•,.;1 ar -need the ti,r,sler of cargoes between
ship and shore,. Almost one quarter of thehuge
cargo carrying space on the Beaverdell is refrig-
erated for safe transport of perishables. Electric
fans ventilate all the holds, while "tell -tales"
and long distance recording thermometers enable
the ship's officers to keep a close check on the
cargoes, at all times. Other peacetime uses of
"war -baby" developments in use• on the ship in-
clude radar, gyro -compass, and the latest radio
telegraph communication sets. The new 10,000 -
ton vessel was given a rousing welcome upon
her arrival at the busy port where she discharg-
ed 0,000 tons of cargo, some of it rubber from
Singapore, and loaded Canadian farm produce—
including meat, eggs and flour—for the United
Kingdom. At right, Mayor J. D. McKenna of
Saint John congratulates Captain B, B. Grant
011 the return of the Beaver line to the North
Atlantic fast freight service.'
1y
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