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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1945-05-18, Page 6nt a;. 11' ina'kelrs: May is the rains, spring flowers. Lig' list$, • But it is also Ai many .people -are 1 .,:Ove r' seed . packages.. This here is. as great a need as in est , two ' years for more in - ',garden plpts, Many of us �axia already have the Victory adenr habit; we like to see things ogli g` 'ntid Vie like to grow our 4 tk. I4apitals are taking a tip from ry' Garden enthusiasts by using gar�7ening as a healing means of re- 14l1i`Ixtating disabled veterans. Carrot Ring 2 cups riced, cooked carrots 3 eggs, well 'beaten 3 tablespo ns melted fat 1' teaspooh Minced .onion 1 cup milk 1 teaspoon salt Pepper, to taste. Mix in te order given and pour in- to a well -greased ring mold. Set, the mold in a ,shallow pan •of hot water, an inch deep around the, ring, and bake in anoven at 350 degrees for 40 minutes. Remove from oven, and let 'stand a few minutes; then loosen edges, invert a large hot plate over the mold and turn out carefully. If desired, melted cheese may be pour- ed ever the ringjust before serving. Fill the centre 'with peas, beans, as- 'paragus -or creamed fish. Serves six. 0. •• • • Nir NININNNINNml QIP /a% 61AKE YOUR DOM, „IOTEL WAVERLEY A MODERN.' WELL CONDUCTED CONVENIENTLY, LOCATED NOTE. TPADINA AVE. COLLEGE ST. RATES Shale: $1.50 - $3.50 Doable: $2.50 • $7.00 warm FOR 1,01..0.01 As Mi POW.1J_ 1 WHOLE DAY'S $1OHTSEEIN9 WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE pwwaoo+r Corn 'Timbales 1 cup canned corn 1 tablespoon chopped parsley*" % cup of milk 1 tablespoon chopped onion 2 eggs, slightly beaten Salt and pepper to taste. Mix the ingredients. Pour • int four greased custard cups, set in shal- low pan containing about half an inch of hot water, and bake in oven at 325 degrees for at out 30 minutes or until a knife blade inserted comes out clean. To serve, loosen the edges and turn onf. Serve with a vegetable plate din- ner, including green beans, .baked potatoes and broiled tomatoes .on toast rounds. Casserole Meat and Spaghetti "1 onion, sliced 1 lb. hamburg steak 1 can tomato soup r/a package spaghetti 1 cup boiling water Salt and pepper.. Cook 'the spaghetti until tender. in boiling salted water, then drain and keep hot. Put a tablespoon of oil or dripping into a hot frying pan and saute the hainburg until brown,' stir- ring occasionally. Brown onion in hot • fat and stir occasionally until well -browned. Put in one cup of boil- ing water, coyer and simmer 15 min- utes. then add the cooked spaghetti, the salt, pepper and tomato soup. Macaroni and Cheese • 1% cups macroni (broken in 11/2 inch lengths) ' Salt and pepper- to taste 1 teaspoon dry mustard • 1 cup rich milk 1 cup or more grated cheese. Cook macaroni •-until barely tender in "boiling salted water. Drain, add. salt and pepper, and mustard dissolv- ed in a little of the milk. Stir well• so that the seasonings will be' well distributed. throughput the macaroni. then .add the milk and cheese, saving enough cheese to sprinkle generously over the top. Turn into a greased casserole, top with grated cheese and .bake in an oven at 350 degrees until lightly browned. Take a Tip 1. In choosing a ,new area .for vege, ve;eta�bi$s 1n Spgg dam#M ao ''iovl*iil, .+• or ..dee'f► .hang- O Should l)e Cail�owed. k?" breaking pp, the soil ROI it crumbles rely amd until fertilizers are event" 1111 . Veeertalbles require wild fertilis- ed land. Rake the part of the becl 'which you are preparing`'for seed- ing down, ainooth, leaving the re- mainder in senna -rough state until seeding time.. Some "seeds '•being more tender than others 'will not ',be planted until later. 3. Varieties essential to health& oa,n -- Gen ;�1 :l�artxn�lt ,tt< 't metre^ e. rte r Congress Alneribaxi a, camps, Conditions in these mass produc- tion murder ttories have been fully covered' 'byy t0.taiiy war correspondent with comipi t y unanimity of opinion. But 'Eisenho I'fr, having examine&• one be grown in very small space—for-hiselt, call%{ hardly believe the- evi- instance, carrots, lettuce, parsley, ('deuce of iti[;ra, own eyes. Therefore,,he made his.request, not as any reflection upon the accuracy, of the correspondents,' but as a,,means of convincing the American people• that the conditions cannot be exag- gerated. He wanted to let them: un- derstand• mere fully the nature not only of the enemy we are facing, but the enemy we must still confront af- ter military victory. The newspaper delegation has just returned from Weimar, where we in- spected the horror camps uncovered _At Buchenwald. From this group a committee of three 'was chosen , to draw up an of- ficial report to the war department and the American newspapers. The committee, is made up of Julius Ochs Adler of the New. York Times, Stan- ley High of Reader's Digest, and the writer of this article. I now write "not as a member of the reporting committee, but give my own personal opinion. If everybody could see what we have seen, there. would sweep- over .North America a complete under- standing of what Nazism means as a threat to the peace of the world and the hopes of mankind. That threat will not end when the Nazi "armies are crushed. • The threat is not that,of mere phys- icaI force, - „it is the .po'wer of an idea conceiv- ed in hell and •gestated .with fiendish genius. a 1 will ..not .dwell long on the sights we ,saw at Buchenwald. They, have been 'acdurately reported. I saw hun- dreds of creatures that were once hu_ man beings now reduced to mere skeletons covered with skin, The on- ly happy ones were ‘piled like cord- wood in the. yard" waiting their turn at the vast crematory. I saw the long. row of gallows at which many were hanged, to die of slow .strangulation. I saw the' clubs with which they were beaten. • I saw the' lampshades made out of human skin by the pros- titute wife, of the Nazi commandant tc gratify his• sadistic desires—from skin torn from,the living flesh of vie - Aims when the `� tattoo; markings pleas- ed the artisttfancy. I saw more ` than 5,000 children, babies of four and five up to 16. Some of these in the last .12 years have grown to. adulthood in this camp. These people were not prisoners of War_ .:. They were thrown into . this hell on; earth for just one reason: ` they re- fused to accept the political philoso- phy of the Nazi party. .They were slave labor. First Jews and anti -Nazi Germans, then other brave souls who refused to conform;' they ,came froth all the conquered. Wer inched: the war dd« send te. rte`' 'uxaa ar a delega' i / ton ; another delegation . of ors to See Naii prison 'beans and the all-important toma- to. ometo. Even a sunny window box can. grow vitamins in the form or pars- ley or chives. The Question Box Mrs. 13. /. says: "Tell she bow you make crisp popoyers stand up." . Answer: When you bake popovers, have the baking pans sizzling,.hot be- fore you pour in the mixture. Grease them generously and heat in the oven until hot. . (Eledtric oven should be .preheated or- top element turned off). Our,. rule for crisp popovers is this: Sift together 1 cup flour and ', tea- spoon salt. Beat 2 eggs." Adt 1 'cup milk and 2 teaspoons melted short- ening. Add to the flour and beat several minutes. Pour into heated cups and cook j,A" oven at 450 degrees for 15 minutes. Turn off the oven, open the door and .leave in oven 5 or 3 minutes more to crisp. Mrs. N. D. says: "We're very. fond o+.' vegetable loaf for. supper. Chop- ped• nixed vegetables are thoroughly mixed with eggs and crumbs. Use 2 eggs and' two -third '.ou.p ..dry crumbs for a. quart 6f vegetables and don't forget to seastin well. Bake in a moderately heated oven for 34 hours." Mrs. J. M. says: "Ever. try flavor- ing bacon—roll back bacon around 'a SEction of dill pickle, then ,broil itt. 'It takes on a pleasing flavor. 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. A teacher ,was giving his class a lecture on charity. "Willie," he said, "if I 'saw a boy beating up a donkey and stopped ;him from .doing so, what virtue would I l?e showing?" Willie (promptry): "Brotherly love." IT$ TINIE TO- BE GLAD Germany has collapsed. 1t k as. if we had been in a tug-of-war, with°life itself as the prize. - Now suddenly, the ,line seems loose in our ;k hands. We musf brace ourselves lest the pent up force of our own power ",send us plunging backward into disorder. Joy is natural to us -at this time; but let us be glad .wisely,7Mue'h remains to be done.. Much sacrifice must yet be endured if we are to e'stalilish on this world that peace and order which is, and has been, our real goal.' ""i'h'arikful we should be. Proud we may well - be of the courageous fidelity of our fighting men andthe women who have backed them up; and of the proven~quality of our technical minds and industrial workers. 'Let us face the future with confident deter - initiation that Canada's new war -developed abilities shall be applied to assure better living for all our people. As Hydro has expanded to power the mighty war industries of Ontario, so in bending for peace your Hydro stands ready to do its foil part in providing a dependable 1owica'st electrical` service to .,heroes, industries and -fruits: N• THE HYDRO -ELECTRIC POWER COMMISSION OF ONTARIO r <.r r+i 1ST() eot of eR v 0:ci 'beal}tifui, nail, . ToPrfnIbol %iMUU VC!a>t , seemed far wear in tttek dihteritri Ari"*. Thiess. At weyiniar, exgept far }1 gPeetelO, <•` azna ( e4; building dile ,311$10.0 cons tinned. -n no American oity have 1, ever seem, do wart* a 11,e0,PIe rho looked better fed, mire proal?eroiis; The women are wearing .silk tress,; time children have shoes of a type de- nied our •catildrb,n. The deep bgsoii ed' women and girls and the, men and' boys seen overfed, 4f anyhing. The German civilian .population leeks less like a conquered people than any con- quered• people could possibly look. They are, physically conquered, not mentally. ' On their faces there seem to be an ill -concealed smugness and con- tempt for the invaders .that is appar- ent if not articulate. One has but to watch their expressions when they speak to each other, as American, troops pass by. Into this beautiful city of Weifnar, ,home of the glorious Goethe and, the 'seat* of the former German republic, we drove and then out six miles to Buchenwald, once the hunting estate a1= Bismarck. And there, -amidst the richness of the land, the prosperousness of a people well fed and clothed because the food and clothing of the other peoples of Europe were taken froth A, fid. �i' of.tel& i' „W!�+Ya }11ialpt�rid.1 of r d �#nr4, + e « r cppItgr ' rte.witoria- .SPI'. , taw** T 43. ' ,*4."4h 'y;ti?`.s ?+ndv._:.s•4 444 4i*iti0l++wi104a) them;; we di end: thialittltoulan siades. Never re=nfen eonfranted' with such a contrast. These poor creatures did not have to be starved. It has never been a question of Germans needing food be- cause there was not enough to go around.. One look at Weimar and the surrounding country of abundance re- futed 'any such defence.' These men who had refused to. accept .totalitar- ianism are no longer able to work. That is all. They were victims of an ideology. For them the road to serfdom ended in a handful of ashes at .a crematory. That is why I say that Buchenwald is but a symbol, a symbol of a con- cept- of life outlined years, ago by Adolf Hitler in. "Mein .Kampf.". Buchenwald is the logical, inexor- able result of''that philosophy of brute force, the 'repudiation of Isaiah,. the denial. of . Ghrls.t, I think that is why Eisenhower has peoples of Europe. You have but to look at them to understand . why there • is no under- ground in 'Germany. When the Nazi •party' became supreme in Germany, all opposition Was killed, starved or imprisoned. 'I'hese-men worked in the war fac- tories n4ar„Weimar and- in the quar- ries. They were fed only as long as they could work. Then they.w,ere al- lowed to die. The little children were fed• and allowed' to live because, as :they grew. older, they could . add. to the manpower. They were forced to labor as soon as they, were strong enough, •some at the age of eight.. Through interpreters we talked to dozens of the .dying, to the tough survivors and to -the strangely ani- mal -minded children -puzzled, even frightened, by the kindness of G. I. Joes and the tenderness of Anieri- cati nurses. This is not really an• assignment for senators and congressmen,' flews- papermen or ministers, of God. This task sh8nlld be assigned to ac- credited scientists of the mind, pay- chi;trists trained to dispassionate, impersonal study ofr^the cesspools of iniquity which lurk in the human mind and which flare forth when that mSnd becomes distorted or 'diseased. bt is not time for emotionalism. "It is not a study of any one indi- vidual human being or group of hu- rnan 'beings. It is a. national neurosis, the mass production bf,.,a„w,dtld insan- ity generated by .the power of an evil idea—pie elimination of •all individu- •al rights, the' rejection of the human soul, the denial of .God himself, the apotheosis of opposition to every clean and worthy thing ' o which, America has ever Istooii. We were flokin from Paris to Weimar, dropping low over the wind= ing Rhine to see the smashed bridges and the gutted city of blenx,' then over the agricultural '.g1ories of '11�tt11t iglu, richest of farthing land; whir ,all ' the spring earth .pregna 1t whir .:food, had us here. He knows_ the l!:.., war 10 won. It is just a question e mopping up the remnants. But 'l1Le knows that this Hitler*/ soul 01 the werewolf •will live on iu the minds and hearts of the people be has cor- rupted. It will carry on in the warped minds` of a whole generation that fiowei'pd under his horrible regime. This is the most ' terrible problem the human race will have to face in. the post-war„ years. - .1n Mrs. Murphy: "What do yott hear from your boy, Mike, in Australia'?” Mrs. Clancy,: "Faith and it's .bads news. He writes that 'he's running around with a jeep.” ' Mrs. Murphy: "Dont worry; Mrn, Clancy, that's what they call those little ' army autorliobiles. " Mrs. Clancy: "Saints be praised;{ 1 thought a jeep was a female Jap." At Last— ir Play for t Farmer: "Canadian farmers have never had "a fair return for they labour. They. are forced to buy in a protected market at relatively high prices and to'sell in a world market at generally low prices. What agriculture needs is not crutches to carry its disability; it needs to' have the disability removed. This can only be accomplished by permanent measures and long range planning." - At last—a farmer fights. for fair play for farmers ! For more than twenty years John Bracken, the Farmer, was theundefeated leader of a Farmers' Party. To -day, as leader of a great, national progressive party, he is deter- mined that throughout the length and breadth of Canada there shall be a square deal for agriculture _ .. fair play for the farmer .. on a' permanent basis! Farmers have seldom hada fair share of the nation's income. Rarelydo they receive a" just reward for their endless labours. John Bracken means to stop, once and for all, the unfair discrimin- ation against farmers, the unjust economic practices which make it im- possible for farmers to obtain fair prices for the fruits of their .labour. "It is the responsibility of the nation," says the leader of the Progressive Con- servative Party, "to see that this great - inequity shall not be perpetuated _ I know where I' stand in the matter. Let me make that position clear. It is not fore -ordained " that farmers shall work for less pay than anybody else; or have their children receive only one- quarter the chance of a secondary edu- cition or one-tenth of the chance of a university education that other children get; or see their wives forced into lives of toil, often 12 but sometimes 14 hour's a day—Sundays and .holidays included. .. The trouble is that no one with'the necessary authority has determined to correct the basic economic ills of Agri- culture." To -day, John, Bracken, the Farm& seeks the necessary authority to put into immediate operation the far-reaching Progressive Conservative policies that will permanently ensure fair play for the farmer.• .Here are just some of the points in the Progressive Conservative plan for . the definite, continuous and permanent protection of farmers against income collapse and wide ex- •tremes of income fluctuation: The Farmer shall be guaranteed- „ uaranteed-, proportionate share of the nation's income. ' A permanent policy for forward contract prices shall be guaranteed to farmers—by law., , The prices guaranteed will be cal- culated by a non-politit;al council, and will be based oh the farmer's pro- portionate share of the national income. .These prices will be an- nounced before the production seasons begin. ' This- policy will increase present average fare income by not less than twenty per cent. It ,takes a farmer to understand farmers' problems. Only a 'farmer .knows the full economic injustice from • which farmers suffer.: To -day, , John ;Bracken is fighting for fair play for every farmer. The',leader of the Pro- gressive Conservatives js determined to bring security and prosperity to permanently. Join in the fight. Help him •to vein his life-long struggle to give Agriculture a place in Canada's'prosper- ity, not for a day—but for all time to come. A Farmer fights for you ... He needs your help. WIN ' WITH BRACKEN Vote for Your • • • ESSIVF CONSERVATIVE CANDID >, 1'nblfsba1 lie filo Progressive Conservative inn/. ottnivn. • .A 4 f A a s M ti