HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1945-03-15, Page 4THE SEAFORTH NEWS
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THE SEAFORTH NEW -VS
Snowdon Bros., Publishers
Concert & Dance
Walton Community Hall
WED.., MARCH 21
Admission 25c & 15c
DRAW FOR QUILT
Wilbee's Orchestra
Ladles.. Bring Lunch
Time 5.15
COME AND HELP THE JR.
RED CROSS
• Mr. and. Mrs. rWalter Murray of
Seaforth at the hone of Mr. and '
Mrs. W. Humphries,
Mrs H. Skinn at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. R. W, Hoy.
• Mrs; R. W. Hoy spent a few days
in Hfuniltou lately.
TITS HOMEMAKER
Hello Homemakers! We hiltgly
recommend such substitutes as
creamed vegetables, cheese casser-
oles, bean dishes, platters of fish
and fowl, and egg dishes. A few of
these have been selected and we
tbsps, flour, i'._ cups milk, 1 tap.
salt, 1/8 tsp. pepper; '_• cup grated
cheese,
Peel the turnips, cut in shreds
and cook in salted hailing water for
21) minutes, Make a White,'sauce with
fat, flour, milk, salt and pepper.
Pour this over strained turnips and
sprinkle with grated 'cheese. Place
over hot water and continue cook-
ing 15 minutes—or if electric oven
is "on" place in moderate oyen. for
15 minutes.
KESWICK BEANS
hope you enjoy their flavour and 1'', cups pea beans, 1 cup stewed
colour.
WALTON
Don't forget the St. Patrick's
social in Duff's United Church, on
Friday evening, March 16th.
A crowd of two hundred or over
attended the masquerade dance in
Walton community hall last Friday
evening and enjoyed dancing to the
music of Ken Wilbee's orchestra.
The judging for the prizes took
place at 11.30. Judges were Mrs. B.
Walker, Brussels, Wes Hackwell, 1
Walton, and Mr. F. Rutledge, Blyth. :
They awarded the prizes as follows:
Best couple, either conic or charas-.
ter, Mrs. C. Bennett, Marjory Hack -
well; ladies' character costume, Jean
Coutts; ladies' comic, Ruth McDon-
ald; gents' comic, Mrs. Cliff Brown;
gents' character, Bernice Hackwell.
The prizes were war savings stamps.
11'Ir. and Mrs. George Beadle of
Auburn are visiting at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Brown, her
Parents.
•
Mrs. Gowland of Fergus spent the l
week end at the home of Mrs, W. S.
Forbes and her sister, Mrs, Thomas
Williamson.
Miss Edith Ennis at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Ennis.
Annual eeting
SEAFORTH FARMERS'
CO=OPERATIVE
n ill ht' held Satin day. Masch
17t11. ,;t _' p.m., !n Seaforth
Public Library Hall.
Everyone is cordially invited
to be present at this meeting.
Importaul changes lit roustinu ion
to be discussed.
R. S. McKERCHER, Pres.
FRANK REYNOLDS, Secy.
BAKED HALIBUT
2 pounds halibut, fat salt pork, 1
small DRIOD.- thinly sliced; bitof
bay leaf (puck out whole spices), 3
tbspus. baking fat, 3 tbspns, flour, /•-•
cup buttered crumbs.
Arrange 6 thin slices salt pork in
casseroles. Cover with onion, add
bay leaf. Place halibut over pork
and onion. Spread top with fat and
crumbs aucl 'arrange narrow striys
of salt pork over crumbs. Cover
flour creamed together. Cover With
with greased paper and. bake 50
Minutes in modern •elecric •oven
(350 deg.) removing paper daring
last 15 Minutes to brown crumbs.
Serve with White Sauce, using fat
it pan 10 place of butter. Sprinkle
with paprika. Serves 6.
MOCK SCALLOPS
Cut halibut in pieces about the
size and shape of scallops. Dip in
crumbs, egg, and dry in deep fat
(375 (lag.) or • hot enough to brown
la cube of bread in 50 seconds.
STEAMED FISH'
and strained tomatoes, 1 can vege-
table -beef 'soup, 1 onion (finely chop- ,
ped), 1 clove garlic (finely chopped),
'4 cup butter, 2 tsps. salt.
Soa k beans overnight in cold wat-
er, drain and parboil until soft, Put
in baking dish or bean pot, add other
ingredients, cover and cook in slow
electri oven (250 deg.) until beans
have nearly absorbed sauce. I
CHICKEN CALIFORNIAN
4 pounl fowl (cut in pieces for
serving), salt and pepper',- 1/2
small onion (sliced), 1 cup rice
(uncooked), boiling water.
Cover fowl with boiling water, add
onion and rice, and cook clowly until
tender (about 4 hours) adding 2 taps,
salt when half done. Season to taste.
Take out rice and onion and brown in
a little fat; serve on top of chicken.
EGG FRICASSEE
6 icilycooked eggs, 3 cups stock
from soup -bone, minced parsley,
cnopped onion, 3 tbsps. fat, 3 1
tbsps. flour, '/.t cup cream, salt
and pepper.
Cut toe eggs In slices. Make a
(Cod. Pike, Trout, Perch) sauce of tse stock, fat, flour and sea -
1 Dry-meated fish are best for boll- sonings. Add the sliced eggs, the l
Incof steaming as flesh will re- cream and salt and pepper. Mix well
olein firths. Unless full is to be gar- and serve very hot.
t-lted whole, it is better to cut into TAKE A TIP
Pl'eus fur serving before holding 1, T keep woollens in circulation
and steaming. - longer it is important to. give
Sprinkle fish liberally witlt saltthele care and frequent cleans -
anal stcam over boiling water or ing. C'se plenty of water but not
• soup stock with a bit of garlic• in 11. tarts much soap. Squeeze through
the suds and brush any soiled
spots with at soft brush. Rinse
well in 3 01' 4 basins of warm
water, Squeeze dry and spread
out on clean paper to tlry.
Perspiration, flirt and grease that
are allowed to remain in the
fabric of overalls weaken the
cloth. Frequent washings are
better than severe laundering
very dirty clothes.
8. Clothes that 'have become yel-
lowed can be whitened by first
noalcing them over night In water
contenting borax—about ?/1 cup
...to 1 galion;'of water. If tie ' result
is not satisfactory, let them
freeze in cold weather; Thi's will
whiten cottons and linens won-
derfully.
Farm Tractor and
Fatal Accidents
According to a re- c- en- t report issued
by the Kansas State Board of
Health, the greatest single cause of
fatal farm accidents in the state was
farm machinery and the machine tak-
ing the greatest toll of lives was the
tractor.
Tractors were the means by which
27 Kansas farmers met their deaths
in a year. Twelve farmers died when
their tractors overturned. One of
these men was not accustomed to
driving. Two farmers were fattally
crashed when trying to drive tractors
up a steep slope. One man's tractor
overturned when being di -oven across
a ditch; another, when being .driven
out of a ditch. When driven too near
the edge of a ditch an enbankmeut
or creek hank, seven more tractors
overturned and each time the drivers
wee killed.
Steam is preferable to bailing as
rials
flavour is lost. Save any juice
that comes from the fish to use in
sauce in plass: of water. Serve with
n tasty MICR,
TURNIPS WITH CHEESE 3,
2 yellow turnips: 2 tbsps. fat. 2
urea
MILLIONS of innocent victims of
war are without food and clothing for
hungry. ragged bodies—without skilled
CRIT for the sick.
In collaboration with the ileal Cross, we
Palin for funds to send urgently
the destitute in oUt
needle
are appealing
g' bodies
homelands—the
ds -the help that saves b
homelands^ '
and rendes hope.
" et Gross. is
contribution to the Bedscsss
Your which you can exp
the one y athy for those who are
a practical
sympathy
enduring so much.
need is great. Vie. cannot <' f
Theis
ignore then pleading.
� F,
t
THE CANADIAN UNITED. ALLIED RELIEF FUND
A joint organization of the Belgian Was Relief Fund; Canada- HEADQUARTERS - 130 QUEEN STREET OTTAWA
Fran Relations Committee. CanaanduAid t R,nsia, Cana
dine Fri Ona8 of xomboru g, ChuM.. Warfu Fund, Cacao. WIIIIasfBlrka LL D„Chainnon Hon.Thon c V n K.C., V
ca•Chalrman
slovnkm War Charities Fund, Danish Relief Fund: Creek War Lawrance3Bur a. Esq., Secretary-
Treo.uror
Relief Fund, NetherlanRelief Fnd. Norwegian.Relief Fund, Registeredunder the War Charities Ad
UnitedPolish Relief Fund, Yugoslav Relief Fund, Department o4 National War Services
THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1945
REGENT THEATRE
Seaforth
NOW SHOVING-- TWO FEATURES
6013 ROPE, PAULETTE GODDARD)
"GHOST BREAKERS"
When the ghost walks they nits
..MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
`ANN SHERIDAN - ALEXIS SMITH
"THE DOUGHGIRLS
JANE WtMAN CHARLIE . IRUGGLES
A drama filled with laughs
-- NEXT THUR. 'PRI. SAT. TWO -FEATURES
ANN SHIRLEY DENNIS 'DAY
"MUSIC IN MANHATTAN"
The season's gayest scandal
ALSO— DIANA BARIIYMORF, ROBERT CUMMINGS
"BETWEEN US GIRLS"
COINING— "HOLLYWOOD CANTEEN"
Ten Tamers died after falling from
their tractora. Five died as the result
of the fall itself, Five were run over.
by other machinery as a esult of
their fall. One of these farmers was
run over by a disc, two were fatally
injured by a one-way plough, and two'
by a mowing machine.
OATS AND SEED CLOVER
Orders are being booked 201' those Dasix Oats at 90c per bus. for
large quantities, and 31.00 for smaller lots.
Also a few More bushels of extra No. 1 quality Red Clover seed at
$19.00 per bus. Also book your order now for Maynard's Hybrid Seed
Corn for May delivery.
AS seeding is going to be on next week, phone your order tonight
to 34-616, Clinton. Reverse the charge to
JONATHAN HUGILL & SON
P.S. 15 you want us to put up a C01100ete Silo this summer, you
had better phone us immediately, as orders have come in for 6 Silos
this week
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UNTIL / SAW A BOY WHO NAD
• "When I had no shoes I complained.
-until I saw a boy who had no feet".
So reads and ancient proverb.
Left by air -raiders to face life without
feet or•legs, is the pitiful lot of Tony
Hyett, of Wickham, England. He is
but one of thousands whose sufferings
and loss make our own trials seem
trivial by comparison.
Will you help the Red Cross care for
these innocent victims of modern sav-
agery? The bombed -out in the cities—
the wounded in the field—the sick in
hospital—the captives in enemy hands
—the starving women and children of
the liberated countries all look to the
Red Cross.
Because the world needs the Red Cross
as never before, your generous support
is needed now more than ever. Lend a
hand! GIVE GENEROUSLY.
Destitution and WW/ant are so urgent and
desperate in the liberated countries, that
the Minister of National War Services asked
the Red Cross, with the collaboration of the
Canadian United Allied Relief bend repre-
senting the War Charitiesof eleven of the
United Nations, to include funds for this
relief in the national appeal,
Local Campaign Chairman
Phone 189
�� �CROSS
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Whin High ay Ai
80 11v i
"Enter ye Al at the s rat gl r tor wide is"Because strait is Um gate and N_lni OW is
the Eato and BROAD is t he wry that leadeth to the way wl)itlt learleth unto acid i.' ,l4' there
destruction and MANY there be which go in be that raid it.
their, at."Matt, 7:13 '5l art, t; 14
0 "If thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Nord esus, and shalt believe in thine
heart that God hath raised Him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. Rom. 10:9•
"For with the heart man believe:thruntil righteousness; and' with the Mouth
Rom, 10:10
before men, him will I , confess - also
confession is made unto salvation”
"Whosoever therefoie shall Confess ale
before my Father which is in heaven.
But whosoever shall deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father
which is in heaven." Matt. 10:32,33
TUNE IN: Pilgrilns• Ho`vlr 7-7.30 E.D,S.T, Sunday Evening
LOCAL STATION — CKLW WINDSOR
010 • fashioned Revival Hour — rebroadcasts on many stations at various Boars
'Chas. E. Fuller, P.O. Box 123, Los Angeles 53, California
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