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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1943-09-03, Page 6t NE *IAN oro f e;nornisf '. 9NN:ST ; PQi 4 AE IN •E OF HARVii;' 7° emakers! Mane `4ege fruits may be preserved 114liaal state for winter use Canning or dehydrating. For properly constructed storage title' ia. necessary. Two favorite 1q;e"iatheds are; the use of a cold room gitiae; 'bassement of the house, and pt iea,ge: pits made outdoors. The storage_ cellar must be cool, Well ventilated and dark. An ade- quate. room may be built in the cor- ner of the cellar with 2 x 4 studding and boarded both sides. Waterproof building paper should be tacked hor- %aontally faCm the top down across the . studding. This will stop insulat- ing material from sifting down. Then the space: between the studding is Wiled with sawdust or other insulating material. A window ,is necessary •to give ventilation but it should be shad- ed to keep out the light Make a chute to cover one-half the window, extending it to within eight inches from the floor. This allows the cold air • to come in at the bottom and warm air, to escape front the other half of the window. .Slats or shelves !,c TORONTO > Hotel Waverley SPAM:NA Avs. ax Cou sps Sr. RATES SINGLE - $1.50 to $340 DOUBLE $2.50 to $6.00 Special' weekly \ Monthly Rates A MODERN ... QUIET .... , . WELL CONDUCT1D ... CORAIMAENiLT LOCATE) IIOiML .. . ,`sora to Parliament Buildings, 1Tnivenuty i Toronto, Maple� Lea£ Gardens. Fashionable o eWholchsBloures.Theatrs.Cbure of Every Denomination. A. .3L Poems. President shouldbe used to keep food- off the floor and permit air eircillation. If tlhe floor is concrete part of it may be covered ° with damp sand or peat moss to -furnish needed b.umidity. Sprinkle some water on each day. Use a thermometer and adjust the window each day to maintain a. temperature of 32 to 40 degrees.. Outdoor pits keep vegetables very well, but it is sometimes difficult to get them out in cold weather. Sev- eral pita are preferable to one large one, so that all the vegetables- may be removed when it is opened. Stor- age places should be left moist to prevent wilting. Covering •a barrel with straw and earth provides an outdoor storage. space. Leaves will serve instead of straw. The stave barrel is placed on its side, filled• with trimmed' (but not washed) vegetables such as carrots, salsify and potatoes. The lid is put on and then suecessive layers of earth and leaves are added to prevent' freezing. You may need to cover to a depth of four feet. One victory gardener recommends the following method for -Storing cab- bages. Pull -and set the roots in a shallow trench. Cover the roots with earth. Erecta frame about two feet high around them. Bank the sides and top with earth. Cover well with leaves. ' k• .1F * RECIPES Dixie Relish (2 quarts) 1 cup chopped red peppers 1 cup chopped green peppers 1 cup chopped onion'. 1 cup chopped cabbage 2 tablespoons mustard seed 1 tablespoon celery seed I/4 cup sugar , 2 cups vinegar 2%/2 tablespoons salt. Soak peppers in medium brine for 24 hours. Freshen in cold water one to tyro hours. Drain and chop. Mix chopped vegetables and let stand in crock over night. "Pack into jars. Cover with vinegar and seasonings. Partially seal. Process in a hot wa- ter bath for 10 minutes. Remove and seal. Process in a hot water bath for 10 minutes. Remove and seal. Cabbage and Green Apple Salad 1i head cabbage 1 carrot 1 green apple 4 radishes Lettuce 1/4 teaspoon salt Salad dressing or' mayahnaise„ Shn'ed C,<Eb,taot' 'and 4A pl7lt blaigt til?" Pee' 4141. ,04Tigh0gx SOW : +,pix With salad' dressing or mayonnaise. Serve in lettuce- °KIX '1114, uxakeP a go.o:1 Sti ffing for raw, tomato salad. Spinach, en •Gaese'role 2 tablespoqua butter 1 tablespoon flour r/g teaspoon pepper 3, teaspoon; paprika i teaspoon salt . 3'4 cup milk -. r 2 cups cooked spinach 3 hard -booked eggs Bread crumbs Grated cheese. . Make white sauce by melting but- ter, adding flour, salt, pepper and paprika and mixing well. Add milk slowly and bring to boiling point, stirring constantly to prevent lump- ing. Add one-quarter Cup grated cheese. Put a layer of spinach in bottom of buttered baking dish. Add a; layer. of 'sliced eggs. Pour some, sauce over layers of spinach and eggs. Add more spinach, egg, sauce and top with crumbs mixed with a little galled cheese, This can be prepar- ed several hours before meal time, covered and placed in refrigerator un- til ready •to serve. Braised Celery Hearts 3 or 4 celery hearts - 1 tablespoon chopped onion 2. tablespoons butter Salt, pepper and beef broth. Trim off outer stalks and leaves , of celery and split the hearts in 'halves. Cook onion in butter for a few min- utes, arrange celery on top, season with salt and pepper and then mois- ten with beerhi'roth. 'Cover and- sim- mer over low heat for about 20 min- utes inutes or until tender., Place pan in oven at 350 degrees F. and cook un- til celery has absorbed most of the liquid, basting occasionally. TAKE A TIP: Use parsley while its fresh, It not only enhances the appearance but lends flavour aswell. Eaten frequent- ly it steps up theNvitamin` value of your meals. Use sprigs of it in the soup pot, chop it and add it to meat and fish loaves, sprinkle it 'over sal- ads, add a handful of it to •a dish of creamed potatoes, cauliflower„ carrots, celery or turnips. Add green specks of it to fish. It is especially'. appeal- ing served in potato, cabbage or cel- ery salad. Add Lsome just before the peas or wax beans are cooked.. Fin- ally, tiny branches are served -on fruit, salad plates, sandwich ,.plates and.. meat platters. THE QUESTION BOX Mrs. J. la . asks for Supper Plate suggestions. Answer: (1) Hard -cooked egg slices in to- mato jelly, macaroni and parsley sal- ad, celery sticks and lettuce. (2) Sardines with lemon, potato salad, cucumbers dipped in sour Cream, ,tomato s;Iices. r DuplicateLedger Sheets Counter Check Books Bummed Tape Invoice -Forms'- Lett'erheads Statements Envelopes Sale Bills Tags • The Huron Expositor, since 1860 has been saving the people of Seaforth and district money on their printing reiquirements. Let us subrioit ' sample$; ask us for prices, and we will show you how you, too, may' save money and still not sacrifice quality.' • Established 1860 •` • ePho a 41 lietEA I 'OROS., Publishers, A:PO TII • Wilt .fit `fit°�';5*�. •°! t,�„Ab�:i�t;, Katt tQr'pd. aulecessea bait held, $ .und tltr and alsta,to ger' slop la sfpls,, ''SAMA,IW Tea., lovers mill be able to enlq. a third gra. ;pf' their favourite beverage starting September 2Pd,. This means ib. of `SA1,A1r1A' every six we ka. instead of every eight, (3) Green onions, cooked' green bans, tomaoes stuffed with cottage cheese. r• ' (4) Jellied pork" hocks, cauliflower flowerets, raw carrot strips and shred- ded endive with horse radish dress hag.. (5) Rice and veal jellied, currant jelly, mixed ,vegetable salad • and nas- turtium leaves. (6) Cold beef, jellied horseradish, cabbage and chard salad and radish- es. A nutri-thrift meal is rounded out with rolls, bread• or tea biscuits, fruit in season and milk, buttermilk or tea. Strenuous workers would enjoy a bowl of bot'seup to begin tbeir•s'up- per. Mrs. N. Mc. asks: "How can straw- berry ice cream stain 'be removed from a white pique?" • Answer: Soak in warm clear wa- ter, and launder. If colour remains, bleach with hydrogen peroxide or jav- elle water. Anne Allan invites you to write to - her c/o The. Huron Expositor. Send in• your suggestions°, on homemaking• problems and watch this column for replies. In Quebec (By B. T. R. in Winnipeg Free -Press' World history in aCanadian set- ting was something relatively rare in the past, but with the growth of Can- ada to the rank of world power in this war it is logical that the special posi- tion achieved by ihk' independent Do- minion should be 'recognized. Can- ada is the halfway house between London and Washington, the centres of democratic world pbwer, and it is something more. Canada provides the leaven of Anglo-American unity and amity in the midst'of world fer- ment in , which a new age of world affairs is being shaped. Press observers, here in greater numbers' representing a broader world :audience than have attended any pre- vious A-1 conference of this war, are finding Canadian coloration to news of world importance. They have found• in historic old Quebec plenty of copy with which to fill the wires and radio microphones in the lulls that inevitably arise in news emanat- ing from such 'a conference. Last Saturday afternoon Prime Minister Mackenzie King and Mrs: Churchill received the press •at the Citadel. No finer; more impressive nor more his- toric background for world •decisions could be found than the venerable fortress on Cape Diamond where the St. Lawrence has flowed past the dim wars in which the fate of North America was sealed. Today the fate of 'another century was in the Ytiak- ng, both here in the Citadel and •-be yond in the -Chateau Frontenac hotel —the -true centre of democratic mili- tary effort in a 'global war for the time being. Surely one of the most interesting women in •the background of modern history, and one who has rarely sten- pea into the limelight of harsh pub- licity that beats around her famous husband, Mrs. Churchill was gay and vivacious. She was interested in knowing of each newspaper that each correspondent represented; she want- ed to be photographed in color with a red -coated Mountie, on the open terrace of ' the Citadel. She was photographed 'with the Canadian Prime Minister, with the •Canadian chiefs of staff, with the newspaper girls present, and informally many times, ABY as lne4ekr the ; nelaec Cenference i943- There i p e tee] 'Qtualiy tWe co/40040es, the.. rst eeneerotug Irl- talu•, WI Qa iada, talking ;thii.' e' over art "'the sew 'level of respected e9,uaI- itl : that ivarli;a the shape Of - a' nae' x ittst4 c eadeullniur . The 'SOMA concerned :the United" Nations, with Prune 1l inieter •Churchill, Preaidealt Rooa-evelt and Prime. IvIlnister King as• the leaddi'ug SgRres. It is difficult to draw a line between the two con- ferences', for !they .are 'inter -related closely; From the day, just . two years ago, when Churchill and Roosevelt met at sea, an the Bay of Argentic in New- foundland, and issued the Atlantic declaration on August 14, 1941, until today a whole era. of Allied coilaborar tion has been packed. It is natural that the direction of the war should begin in 1941 at the two -fold meeting of Britain 'and America. But the technique"must quickly broaden down and widen out to include other allies. It is inevitable that Canada should• become the first addition to the top. level of intimate discussion of com- plicated war •decisions, especially when they begih'to drift rapidly into post-war decisions as well. To*put it in :popular parlance, the top level of Allied war direction is beginning to speak the same .thoughts and lang- uage on a three -fold basis, rather than twofold. In future, it will be- come manifold. To understand the conference, one needsEto consider its structure and or- ganization. Of these, precise details cannot be given, 'for they would give the whole show away. In the. world of diplomats, the new terminology speaks of "levels". of authority, an international conference is well strati- fied. To mention one aspect, which is already .publicized, the shipping and war transport experts of 'Britain, United States and Canada are here. This .takes care 'of one vital phase of war planning, for ,the first thing to know is what transport by sea or land is available in the •direction .of any number of objectives that may be se- lected for the next assault. Just as with shipping, 'so with munitions, with military manpower, with a thousand other things which go to make mod= ern warfare -possible. Each level or group knows its own field. But at the next upper level, the experts begin to fashion the patch- work of vast resources into feasible operational plans. Here, they may still be a score or more. possible ob- jectives and the relative advantages of each begin to appear in the light of available resources of all kinds. Finally, the top level.. is -.represented in leaders like Churchill and Roose- velt, and they have 'the final word which will launch the planned re- sources of Britain and America -and Allied countries at itihe next high prize of the war. That prize may be the knockout of Germany. The knockout pf Japan. -. A thousand and one incidental•prob- lems are resolved in the light of the great decisions. Just as the humbling 'of Italy may be traceable to the de- cisions taken at Casablanca last Jan- uary, so the shape of the future lies in decisions being taken at Quebec. It is a surprising thing to discover how many newspapermen from •the fbur corners of tire world know Mr. Mackenzie King, truly become a world figure as Prime Minister of Canada. .It is also surprising how many newspapermen Mr. King„ him- self knows, not only Canadian, but also American and British. It strikes one that Mr. King has been around in the background of world decisions and events for a long time. Now he has come to the fore of the' stage. ;5 So we stood 4111 the terrace of the citadel„,250 feet' above the river, sip- ping Mr: King's tea and .other re- freshments, enjoying the magnificent view. Here a ,classic • example of commando tactic's changed world his- tory once. Beyond in the afternoon haze the Isle of Orleans'' lay. There General Wolfe. established, headquar- ters in his siege of Quebec in 1759. He was repulsed b'y ' Montaalm at Montmorency, below Quebec. Zihen one dark night he brought his •men on the breast of the inc'oniing tide up the river past the'tertress to land at what is now known as Wolfe'$ Cove.After dein, his Men were drawn up, and Montcalm led .his forces out to battle. One teri„i'fie volley froth Eag- Ii$h muskets, last, iflve minutes in duratio i, won the battle. All this lay behind• us- in what >s :now a pleasant and palatial -strainer residence• of the Gallhdian gotief n eiit., i#e'fore 'ix as thb otirs t haaagd iii 06ther era, hitt" ry Was again"unfeiding' • tY"redefltin earls' *Stied. tb Ooxteb pOndenld (Iif'SfPildi o+ ,1 AS��iiY��1 M�1r Wig , shops:. 'are ,hath . 'c4Q1 E914 spurt, fox a ex wear, Shoe ear- 1lez'ts agree thatthey win kleep their geed, leeks ax}d•• wear 1pp;er i they are carefully and freo,nently cleaned., •• Here„ are a few tips on the actual cleaning•x;operrationg for while 'shoes, Clean them, whenever possible: PP;' lasts or shoe trees. 1l'se as ranch water asis necessary and Immediate- ly remove any excess cleaner with a' clean, dry cloth. ' Naptha, alcohol or other solvents shouldnever be used, to clean white leather. 'These fluids remove the oils which the leather contains and the leather is likely to crack. White leather shoes sliould never be dried in the direct sun., Do not apply any cleaner. too thick- ly, If this is done, a crust 'is formed and the leather will tend to crack. • A tearin oilcloth can be repaired with a .piece of adhesive tape placed on the reverse side of the cloth. The edges should be securely pressed down. ,The rip will scarcely show. "Our Family egulator is R. CHASE'S EL) VE R PILLS It as a bright lad . in the Winnipeg shops of Trans -Canada' Air Lines who thought of beating the tire shortage by using wooden wheels on cargo trucks. The carpenter -shop went into production nnd the photograph, top, shows Carpenter John Pearson at work. The whirling saw cuts thin sheets of wood into semi -circles. Theile' are fastened together on the wheel -frame and then the wooden k tire is shaped on the lathe, a strip of canvas applied to it, and the 'hole thing painted. The finished job is shown below, beim:' admired by one of T. C. A.'s gild cargo ]rraiadders. The trucks' carry baggage, snail and express to the planes. Invasion Barges Latest i6High and Wide" Rail Loads • >m problem of the transportation by rail of huge singleolnit mate- • rials needed for Canada's war`effort has.;presented a challenge. which has been met and mastered bar. the in- �etnu .ty of 'Canadian rarlwa3lt1eli, These "oversise" • shiptitients are 'Mott. mg daily over rail fines in all seettons of the bolninion. To inilwayinen they. are known as "hi i1-abd4vide",. low: 'trey scoriae special. este lard ekill int h actm and uban diem alsi ries• rnttittt'g�pe�iai bpetst tl tura ^ efits„ . 'lie' � . . a Cxrngt�raYt '-�ittlo �+a - ��Ii#�y ,hatr�� w•l�t l� Maid• Ott r ,,,the large* ; li :Oral t ,�1, slit'lq, 3 $intsnt �'' « � �tb1 r:' loaded 011.,itide' fybt Pars which Was transported'froth, Montreal to the avern$ ' is 'nett 6Yrithetio 'rubber Llut; at f3axadia ' Tire tee, Trish mrd' rdey ,;Roads• cancel by: the Catiea tt, alibied"ate inbasion bat ea note 4o aiat such exit esefi{{ �• al Matt o tldent of Allies e,fightnsk 'u ijo lirCtllt o�tlVe'"!*, 4 t,th ' lb�eifi :o1f ,41444' 41i1 line Of the National S Other )tntistial freigihtloads' ted, its 'lie drawings are: 1. An arany lady ,mit, 2. A sluty' -foot big Inuit at (Von $o ind and shi p. ed y; c N.R to',the Seaboard. 3. A h ,,,to : ',ilii buil mg p � qty 1r a1�'lae eller W1 ch .... +sited pt e d ear ltdd ntorw to . ttg. Thebigtalk loaded ifi' t -fiat vete for thea e d ° ,,,,,.•i,, .e!�1P ...x, w4L ..�. 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