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The Wingham Advance Times, 1934-11-22, Page 2PAGE TWO THE WINGHAM ADVANCE -TIMES Thursday, Nov, 220(1, 1934 Exquisite Quality and Flavour TEA "Fresh from the Gardens" ECG ECONOMY By Barbara B. Brooks Eggs as eggs have been eaten from �o..o;.M...,. time immemorial. It is also an old, old usage to add something for sea - seining or flavor, or to make thein go further. But . theuse of eggs for thickening liquids or making cakes, breads and sauces light and fluffy is comparatively modern, This stage in Our . history marks the beginning, of 619' fine cookery. In fact, the French tell us that all good cooking •rests' upon an egg. But eggs have not always been plentiful and frugal cooks Havebeen lavish with them only upon special occasions. Until very recently, there was no real justification' in econom- ical cookery for the extravagance of. using plenty of eggs just to make food more delicious. But now science comes to the rescue with the reasons why we need them in our diet. Knowing that each child may well have an egg a day and each adult. three or four a week and that a few more might be even better, the frugal cook can use eggs generously and with a clear conscience. It is real economy to supply in food the essen- tials for building and maintaining a strong healthy body. Eggs are rich in. 'minerals, especially iron; vitamins_ A., B. and G, at least; protein of high grade and some fat. The yolk con- tains most of the minerals, vitamins and fat, while the white is nearly pure protein. In the truest sense of the phrase, eggs are a precious • food. They sup- ply dietary essentials, make food more delicious and fine cookery pos- sible. Store and cook them with much care, Follow recipes carefully, keep- ing in mind these facts: When used for thickening,' in sauc- es, custards, puddings, meat loaves, and the like, beat' eggs but slightly. To .snake a mixture light by incor- porating air, Beat eggs thoroughly until thick and. a light lemon color, for the yolk or whole egg and, for the whites until they will form peaks. For meringues, souffles, and other light mixtures, stop beating while the whites are moist and dry. Do not beat until dry. Eggs are delicate in flavor. Salt in moderation develops the flavor; spices and most condiments cover it Eggs should be cooked at low tem- peratures. This rule includes merin- gues and frying, as well as custards. Slow cooking with low heat gives firm, tender texture. Pumpkin Custard 1 cup pumpkin (cooked and 2 eggs, slightly beaten 1/ teaspoon salt 1/2 cup sugar 2 tbsps. molasses 1/s tsp. cloves 3(s tsp. cinnamon 3s tsp. ginger 2 cups 'milk, scalded Combine pumpkin, eggs, salt, sug- ar, molasses and spices. Mix thor- oughly. Add milk slowly, stirring constantly. Pour into buttered bak- ing dish. Set in pan of warm water. Bake in moderate oven (350 F.) tin - til an insertedknife comes out clean. Vegetable Souffle 1 tbsp, butter or fat (melted) 2 tbsps. flour 1 tsp salt 3! . cup milk 3 eggs (separated) 2 cups mixed vegetables (cooked, seasoned and diced) Combine fat, flour and salt, .Add milk and cook, stirring constantly until mixture thickens. Remove from heat and add the egg yolks, slightly. beaten. Add vegetables and cool. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Four into buttered baking dish. Set into a pan of warm water and bake in a moderate oven (350 F,) until an inserted knife comes out clean. Rice Krispie Macaroons 2 egg whites 1 ;cup sugar 2 cups rice krispies U., cup mit meats THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON The HORSES Wizagham Advance -Times Say what you please about the Published at "vanishing horse", we notice more WINGHAM - ONTARIO real interest in horses and nior-e of them in use than for a good many years past, In Toronto recently. we could not help but be interested in the fine dray teams and delivery horses. Itused to be the brewers' big horses that were the last word in horseflesh, now it's the milkman's. Farmers are replacing gasoline tractors and trucks with "hay -burn- ers," ` for which they can grow the necessary fuel and at the same time cut their fertilizer bills. And in the Next Monday is Nomination Day city streets, nobody has yet built an and the citizens of Wingham should automobile that will move on to the show their interest in administration next house by itself while the milk - Of the affairs of the town by being present at this meeting. There are people who oppose what each council in turn' does during their tern: of office, but who never turn up at the nomination' meeting meeting to hear explanations or ask intelligent questions. Druing this last yearwe have had what might be called a young Coun- cil and theyhave" made a good im- pression on the majority of the tax- payers. There is little doubt that they would for another year carry on and give good administration. The ex- perience they havehad this last year. has been valuable to them as council- lors and it is hoped that they will be given an opportunity to carry on for another year at least. Some of this year's Council are old- er men who have had long experience in civic work and we believe that, combined with the younger men of the Council, we have had a well-bal- anced Council. On this day also, nominations for a Utilities commissioner and for Pub- lic School Trustees, will also take place. Mr. W. H, Gurney m whose ter_ on the Utilities Commission expires Every Thursday Morning by The Advance -Times Publishing : Co. Subscription Rate One Year $2.00 Six months, $1.00 in advance To U. S. A., $2.50 per year. Foreign rate, $3.00 per year. Advertising rates on application. NOMINATIONS man is makinghis morning deliver- ies. It takes too much gas to 'tart a car, especially in cold weather,- to make it as economical as a horse in. any kind of business that calls for frequent stops and starts. * * RADIO LICENSES A great number of people have been operating a radio 'without a li- cense.ui cense. In some-te re- cently there bas been a rush to pro- cure licenses when the radio in pec - tors arrived on an official visit. In many places largenumberof :itizens have been fined for operating radios without a license. The easiest way to avoid extra expense in this con- nection is to secure your license at once if you have not already done so. Many towns ; in this vicinity have already been visited by the radio in- spectors. Our turn cannot be far away. Be prepared — get your li- cense. * s: * s= CONGRATULATIONS We extend congratulatiouts to Mr, and Mrs. H. j. Pettypiece, of Forest, who on Friday celebrated their fifty- fifth wedding anniversary. Mr. Petty - this year, has been a faithful them- piece has for fifty-one years been ber of this board since its inception. editor of the Forest Free Press and He knows the business of this com- mission from the ground up, and, no doubt, will continue in that iffice.. The retiring members of the school board, so far as we can gather from the talk on the street, will meet little or no opposition. The public gener- ally seem quite satisfied with the manner with which the affairs of the public school are managed. Take an interest in your own town and be present at the nomination meeting and hear the affairs of the. town discussed. Insure and Make Sure All the best old established Companies. FIRE! .._ AUTOMOBILE1 ACCIDENT Thirty -]Five Years in the Busi- ness. Abner Cosecs Insurance and Real Estate. during these long yearshe has eery- ed his community well, not only as editor but as Member of the Ontario Legislature, Mayor of the town and numerous other posts. * * * John Smith, of Peterborough, set out to paddle in his canoe "Pride of Peterborough" to England. The boat -torn and battered—is now back in Peterborough, and Smith lost his life in the rough waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. This attempted trip served no god purpose except to show how useless such an expedition can be. * The County tax sale was consider- ed quite a Ere -s-, no doubt, due to the fact that the properties were ad- vertised in the f,,r: papers in the lo- calities in which they were situated. Many propertie4 were redeemed be- fore the sale, no doubt, due to the fact that the sale vas :being held was brought before these people by means of the local paper. Mrs. Newly -Rich "What a horrid. boarding house! It seems like a pri- son." ri son.'' Amicable Landlady: "Well, '.mum, it's all a matter of what one is used to, isn't it?" isonninummununlinunnunnsolusolinzmownsmuninmt Niattland Creamery Buyers f i Cream, Eggs and Poultry sieved) THE CHRISTIAN STEWARD. Sunday, Nov, 25 -Matt, 2514-30. Golden Text. Well done, thou good and faithful servant: thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy lord, -(Matt 25:21,) Are - Christians — those who are truly saved because by faith they have received Christ as their Saviour — ever to be judged by Christ? He is the Judge (John 5.27), but He said: "I -Ie that heareth my word, and be- lieveth in Him that sent Me, hath ev- erlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation (judgment): but •is passed from death unto life" (John 5.24). While this is blessedly true, never- theless, it is equally true that Chris- tians, ever believers, shall indeed be judged by Christ. Not as' to whether they are saved or lost; that question is settled the moment they receive Christ as .their Saviour. But. all Chrstians arc to be judged concerning the works they have dune here on earth since they were saved., "For we must all appear before the. judgment' seat of Christ; that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad" (2 Cor. 5:10). This is a solemn fact too often overlooked by Christians them- selves, and it is well that we have a lesson dealing with it. Our lesson is part of the Lord's answer to the disciples' question. (Matt. 24:3): "What shall be the sign of Thy corning, and of the end of the world" (more accurately. of the con- summation of the age)? In these two long chapters the Lord tells them a great deal about His return, or sec- ond coming; then He says: "Watch therefore, for ye know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son of man cometh." He goes on to ex- plain •that it is "as a man travelling into a far country, who called his own servants, and delivered 'unto them his goods." People sometimes ignorantly say that the Lord expected to return soon after His ascension. But repeatedly He made it plain that this was not to' be. In this lesson, parable He explic- itly says: "After a long time the Lord of those servants cometh." At an- other time He told thein another par- able "because they thought that the kingdom of God should immediately appear.', (Luke 19:11). The lesson plainly teaches that men are not all on d dead equality before, God so far as their gifts, talents, op- portunities are concerned. The Bible nowhere teaches that. In the Rarable the lord of the servants . gave five talents to one, to another two, and to another one; "to every man according to his several ability." It is interest- ing to note, in the light of this lesson and many other Scriptures, that there is no Bible authority for the teach- ing of Communism, in which men arc supposed to have all things equal. It is also significant that Communism today is identified not with Christ- ianity, but with the most blasphemous type of atheism, and that the only country on earth, definitely and of- ficially committed to atheism, Soviet Russia, is the country most complete- ly identified with Communism. The man receiving .he five talents "went andtraded with the same, and made thein other five talents." The two -talent 'man did likewise, and he doubled his ,capital. ' But he that lead received one went and cligged in tea earth, and hid his Lord's money." Then came the day of reckoning,, It was the time of the Lord's return in the parable, as thg time of Christ's second coming to earth will bring in- to judgment the works and service of His own disciples.. To the two. men who had admin- istered their stewardship faithfully, although one now possessed ten tal- ents and the other only four, the Lord spoke exactly the same words of commendation: "Well done, thou good and faithful servant:' thou liast been faithfulover a few things. I wilt make thee railer over many things, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." As a commentator says: "The Lord's commendation may be earned by the weakest of His servants; it is given for faithful service." The unfaithful one -talent man had. an excuse, of course. Like most ex- cuses, it was sincere and false. He knew, he said, that his tnaster was "a hard roan, reaping where thou hast not sown, and gatheting where thou bast not sttawed," .so, being afraid, he went and hid his talent in the earth; "Lo, there thou hast that is thine,'Y And the Lord convicted him out of his own mouth, If the man knew that ioh joy his master was that kind of master,. alt the 'snore reason why he should 1 cup cocoanut 1/a tsp, vanilla extract Beat egg whites until they are stiff enough to hold their shape but not until they lose their shiny appearance.' Vold in sugar carefully. Fold in rice krispies,.nttt meats and cocoanut. Add. ni vanilla. Drop on a well -greased bale-- ing sheet, Bake in a moderate oven gp (350 F.) about 15 to 20 minutes. Re- move pans from oven, place on damp 1, towel and remove macaroons itnnled- 'lately with a spatula or sharp knife. IN If macaroons become hardened to pan, they may be put in the oven for en, minutes to soft a few i en. 1 dozen, Yield: "x' l Js alBaked Eggs in Tomato `Cups Scoop out the centers of large, firm, ripe tomatoes. Sprinkle slight- UNITED with k an . inside ata salt, Break ' .> 1lyonthets w 'ir 1Ct1 d �'� '� with y CO-OP a tv �1��`lC�� ��.���� egg into, each tomato; spritticl ,salt, peer, and fine cores :'lake crumbs COMPANY, t*A.�lf'�', LIMITED. ED. M and dot with butter, take in a mrd- * crate oven (350 P) ttittit the tomato 1111,. skins are slightly wrinkled, NI "Gr"atitude is it soil on thrix ea'-Atterbackk Ontario. . „ 011010101111110011111111 I The A wnce Times Offers Here is a real offer that will save you money .• Give yourself and your family lasting enjoyment and entertainment the whole year through ... This is all you have to do. and you will receive the whole 4 publica- tions \for one year from the date we receive the coupon. Here is the amazing combination tow price. Maclean's (24 issues) 1 yr. ❑ Chatelaine 1 yr. ❑ Canadian .. 1 yr. El National Home Monthly 1 yr.` ❑ Pictorial Review....1 yr. ❑ Canadian Horticulture and Home Magazine ...1yr. Our Guarantee to You! This wonderful offer is avail- able to old and new subscrib- ers to this newspaper. We guarantee the fulfillment of all magazine subscriptions and you have positive assurance that this generous offer is exactly as represented. Re- newals will be extended for full term shown. MAIL COUPON TODAY Please clip List, of Magazines after checking 3 Publica- tions desired. Fill out coupon carefully. Gentlemen: I.enclose $ Please send me the three magazines checked with a year's subscription to your newspaper. NAME STREET OR. R. F. D. •• ••••• TOWN AND PROVINCE have :m "put rnone to the exchang- Sawflies and Solid Stem Wheat the spike to the crown of the .root y Y are :said to be solid. Since varieties. ers, and thenat my coining I should have received mine own with inter Sawfly injury to wheat' in Western est." Canada is noticeable from the steins No . excuses for failure in simple which apparently break off near the duty,going will stand at the judg- base, and fall to the ground. The merit seat of Christ. actual injury arises from the operat-. Comes the , unexpected climax: ion of the sawfly larvae which sever, "Take therefore the talent fromhim, or partially sever, the stems about and give it unto him which hath ten one inch from the ground. in pre- talents, For unto every one that hath paration for their hibernation. Be - shall be given, and he -shall have cause of,the existence of wheats with abundance: but from him .that hath pithy stems, the possibility of these not shall be taken away even that in offering resistance to the activities which he hath." of actual sawfly larvae has been stud- This verdict is absolutely; just and ied at the Dominion Department of righteous, of course—otherwise the Agricultural, Experimental Station at Lord Jesus Christ would' not have Swift Current, ISask. Full 'detailes of given it. Those who show by their the observations and .experiments faithful stewardship that they deserve carried out at the station are given in to be trusted with much will be given a recent issue of Scientific Agricult- much. Those that show that they tire, ' and indicate that sawfly 'damage cannot be trustedwith little will have might be reduced by the use of solid taken from them the little they had. stem varieties of wheat. Stems that Could anything be. fairer than this? are filled with pith from the base of with solid stems are available, the breeding of desirable solid stem, high quality bread wheats is not an insur- mountable obstacle. GRATITUDE "To receive honestly is the best thanks . for a good thing,"—George MacDonald. * *' "Thou' hast given so much, give me one thing more— a grateful heart." —George Herbert. * "Gratitude is much more than a verbal expression of thanks, Action expresses more gratitude than speech. —Mary Baker Eddy. * * * "A single grateful thought toward heaven is the most perfect,: prayer."— Lessing. t• A N T L ES d purest crystal snow spreading over glen: and vale, the smooth sparkling iee surface of rivers and lakes and ,the joyous - tinkling of sleigh -bells remind one that the season for beneficial and, enjoyable Winter sports is again at hand. Other forms of recreational activities are, for the time being, quite forgotten. The toboggan, ski, skate and sled are taken from their sutrtner store• house and properly epinlitioned for: the season's festtvi., Ited� Children wlhoee yeast* scarcely exceed the finger numerals of a hand, youths of 'teen age, adults of :middle life and frequently those whose years are well extended toward the allotted span of life, all join in, the merriment of typical Canadian' winter sports. During the winter season every settled area in Canada is as easily accessible by railroad as in the summer and autumn tnontbs. Many 'miles of provincial highways ate kept free of snow enabling the motorist to reach cities; towns: and villages of international repute as winter sport centres. Neatly every - Where are natural sitett for skiing, o e i n tobogganing, snowah 1 g and obo�ga g, Ly. rinks for ho Covered Gley, skating, and, curling are found in eities, towns and many smaller centres,while open-air rinks ate legion. arnival feats, ineluding bonspiels, toboggan raising, hockey matches, figure skat ing competitions, std jumping Con- tests, ontests, snowshoe processions, and firework displays, add greatly to the enjoyment of aCanadian winter vacation, The National Parks of Canad' Department of the Interior,, Ottawa, will, gladlysuppply irafetntatton pet'* taming to 'Coxiada's Winter droit attractions.