Loading...
Zurich Citizens News, 1959-03-04, Page 5'WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1959 ZURICH Citizens NEWS PAGE FIVE The Needle -Paint (MRS. NORMA SIEBERT, B.A., Woman's Page Editor) The Happiest wife is not the one who marries the best man, but the one who makes the best of the man she marries. —Joseph Fort Newton. * * * The A.B.C. of Egg Care It is when one realizes that egg shells offer little real protection to the egg, since they are porous, that one will realize the import- ance of extreme cleanliness in the care of eggs. Since clean eggs receive a better grade and maintain their original interior quality longer, eggs must be clean. Washing should be done immediately after gathering or af- ter cooling the eggs overnight. Washing the eggs in cold or dirty water or allowing them to soak are the most common causes of poor keeping quality, air cell moulds and black rot. Too hot water or too prolonged washing, on the other hand, may cause the whites to thicken. If egg washing machines are used they must be cleaned thor- oughly after each day's use. The temperature of the water in immersion type machines must be above that of the eggs — not under 100° F. and not over 120° F. The time of immersion must be not over four minutes at 120° F. and five minutes at 100° F. The water should be changed frequently — usually after every six baskets, of dirty eggs. Eggs washed in dirty water, though they may appear clean, may be heavily contaminated with bacteria and mould spores, which will soon enter the egg and lower the keeping quality of the egg. A "PEARSON AUTO LEASING" PLAN iS AVAILABLE TO YOU ON A ONE OR TWO YEAR PLAN LOOK AT THESE ADVANTAGES NEW CARS TO DRIVE NO LOSS OF TIME TRADING OR OBTAINING DELIVERY NO CAPITAL INVESTMENT NO LOSS FROM DEPRECIATION NO SERVICE COST TO YOU A PROVEN WAY TO CUT COMPANY FLEET CAR COSTS LESS TROUBLE THAN ALLOWING MILEAGE TO INDIVIDUAL CAR DRIVERS NEW MODELS RIGHT AWAY LOW MONTHLY RATES NO LICENSE TO BUY INSURANCE COVERAGE TO y2 MILLION DOLLARS Give Pearson Auto Leasing a Call or Write to Jack Turkheim at PEARSON AUTO LEASING LTD. Phone 182 — Zurich One should be sure to use only detergents prepared specially for use with eggs. All eggs should be thoroughly dried and cooled before packing in crates for market, as damp eggs and trays supply ideal con- ditions for bacterial and mould growth. Use of an eletcric fan will hasten this drying. Eggs should be packed in clean trays with the large end up. Eggs should be marketed at least twice a week and should be held under 60° F. until marketed. By following these suggestions, farmers may substantially raise the grading of their eggs and of course their egg returns. —Dept. of Poultry Husbandry, Ontario Agricultural College eol111110. NESEISIMISSIVIENNIMINIMMINAMININKNOWn ESSENTIALS for the well dressed men YOU STILL HAVE TIME! TO ORDER YOUR NEW SUIT IN TIME FOR EASTER NEW SAMPLES HAVE ARRIVED For Made -To -Measure Cambridge Clothes and House of Stone from 49.95 up SPORT COATS Only $22.50 SPORT JACKETS --- Priced from .......... $8.95 to $13.75 Gascho Bros. Phone 59 --- Zurich "THE STORE WITH THE STOCK" Where Are The Herring? ‘ow Only Suckers, Trout Safe From Lamprey (By STANLEY J. SMITH) Some fishermen along the lake on them and the Department of have set nets under the ice and Fisheries on both . sides of the find only the suckers left to be border are trying their utmost to caught. destroy them in rivers when they Local fishermen. Stanley Smith spawn. at St. Joseph for over six weeks The steelhead or sometimes cal - the herring completely vanished; has been fishing and has found led the Rainbow trout are doing well in the Great Lakes. These a fish that used to be caught in fish were planted here several abundance by old timers, and they years ago from the East and West boasted 30 or more dozen herring Coasts where they are native. to a net. Where are they today? They run the rivers and spring After three weeks of trying with 'TEEN TOPICS the hest of nylon and plastic nets creeks in the fall and spring like Studying—what a hateful sub-lI have only got one herring and their big brother, the salmon, only i three perch. they return to the sea after spawn- ject and yet how important. p Ing and don't die like a salmon, A recent magazine article men- tioned the following ways of im- proving one's studying habits: 1. Have one particular, (not too comfortable) place to study. 2. Develop the habit of scanning a page and picking out the im- portant points, 3. Jot down the important points under headings, as a means of consolidating them in your mind. 4. Meet your most difficult sub- ject, not with a defeated air but with determination. Often the subjects which are the most difficult to grasp will stay with you the longest. By ac- cepting their challenge you may find that they give you the most satisfaction in the end. 5. And remember that it is not always the most brilliant stud - end in the class that makes the most successful man or woman. When discouraged, remember such men as Thomas Edison and Winston Churchill. But also remember that their ultimate success lay in the fact that they both possessed a bull -dog de- termination that would never let them quit. It is that determination to ac- complish a task that gets results. :k * But i Do Study! Why, my gay and winsome lass, Do you trail behind your class ? You say you and books don't mix, What about your study tricks? "Always plan my work." you say; A fair run of suckers were on until the last two weeks, then they dropped off to almost nothing. An odd pickerel and steelhead trout are caught—one pickerel measur- ing 30 inches long, weighed 10% lbs., and a trout of 73. lbs. The true lake trout at present is extinct in Lake Huron. The ampreys have been extremely hard "Make a schedule every day." There is only one flaw in it— You tYou don't take time to begin it! Hey, don't daydream! That's taboo. Turn that phonograph down, too.. Use that desk and sit up straight; Really try to concentrate. Books all ready? Fix the light, Not too dim and not too bright. Just forget that TV show— Now where did our gay lass go? Here you come through kitchen door Lugging pop and food galore. Work, you say, takes energy. (Looks more like a feast to me!) Back to work. Hey, there's the 'phone! Who ? You say it's your friend Joan? You're together every day, Still you talk an hour away. Back at last, now let's dig in. Work flies if you'll just begin: What? You have to feed the pup? Here's the dunce cap, I give up! The Department of Lands and Forests has opened a season on steelheads in most of the rivers and creeks up the lake and ar- ound Owen Sound where they are found quite plentiful ,and .soz>ae have been caught, up to 16 lbs., by rod and reel. In the '.Bayfield River these fish will be found and the season is open from May t to September 15. Limit of catch is five fish a day, not less than. seven inches long. These fish spawn in the spring in some rivers where the true lake trout spawned in the fall on the Kettle Point reef, and the reef ,off Kintail. We are looking forward for the day when the steelhead is plenti- ful and can be caught only a few miles from home, instead of going to the East or West Coast, to their native grounds. These fish have a more rapid growth than the lake trout, and for some reason the lamprey don't seem to bother them. Last year in March we caught a two lb. 11 oz. steelhead with a tag in its mouth. It was tuned over to the Department of Lands and Forests at Hespeler, and they informed us later it was one of 89,000 tagged trout released at Ocqueoe River, Presque Isle County, on May 20, 1957; it was eight inches long. That means it grew over three lbs. in one year, if •they get the right water and feed, and swam approximately 200 miles. .....'::%.�N�%-!'IY'dYJW�.:::::::._A'rr.: a� v .-r n„ � ..�. ,i�.�•`�.`L`-1t�.'41'�. ���` y �M1SL-`..^'�'�T-B'r'!±�•:S ECR S Thurs ay, Fri ay, Saturday — SAVE 5c — Stokely Peas 2 tins 33c SWIFT'S Golden Dew MARGARINE 2 lbs. 49c iricr — SAVE 4c — Stokely Tomato Juice 4s tin 29c AYLMER Tomato Ketsup 2 bottles 39c — SAVE 4c — Maple Leaf Sockeye Salmon 45c ROBIN HOOD Upside Down CAKE MIX 8c OFF 37c PKG. BONELESS TENDER HAM by the piece Only 69c Ib. FRESH PORK SHOULDERS 5-6 Ib. average .,., Only 39c lb. SUMMER SAUSAGE by the piece Only 69c lb. THIEL'S Phone 140 — --- Zurich POTATOES so ib. bei .. $1,19 GRAPEFRUIT . 10 for 49c