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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1945-11-02, Page 6I { 1 f I. A , 1 f � '. i restrictions on the production or importation of such machinery have been lifted. .f'•E'!! , a� ' :rrs at which such items sold during the basic period, August 15—September 11, 1941. open. „ ,a4�!lN6 ALLAN r tf I 1 p � - k f yM1�•= •�+.wr�ti�M l�af�R4t:IA* ti10ERQno.in at take at any time—but even more withirr two years of the date of the contract' in stated amounts at specified, dates., Any ,iomemakers'1 The element exposure. With correct exposure ,of., gurpiise adds. zest to meals. Pro- ° ailtl vlding those exciting guises for ev- Bray foods puts meal planning and r preparation on a level with the arts. Odd lighting -effects are simple, ,'or example, the onion, plain and li +1 lowly 2;s It appears, offers countless pveral shots with different ez possibilities to the woman who re- obtain a strange "firelight" effect gards cooking as an art. She uses, it `, , in varying amounts as a seasoning. Welvd, pictures are not all of flat% A •teaspoon of onion juice is added ` to potato s..Iad, one small, finely ' minced onion flavors a meat loaf, or lel' aA six large onions may be used as the ' basis of French onion soup. But the use of onions does. not ,c? (stop with their seasoning value. They Y'62 a.re a vegetable and should often be ' served as such—not always creamed And Hallowe'er. pt1epeilti'Jbn' s pr0- or fried, but glorified ig a main dish. top orthe folie• just below his chin, If you've never served onions an gra- ra tin or stuffed onions why not try one tin a splendid •pieture-Obey opt of the. or both to achieve that element of Wbeiril , tbaclows are picture -ms- surprise your Family enjoys? " 15...... M 11 129 66,67 P 20, 21 y;{ Oniops Au Gratin y,. " 29...... M 13 131 d .. .. Parboil small white onions or large i onions, quartered until almost tender 1= (30 minutes). Drain and rplade in '..; greased casserole dish, Cover onions ` with a medium white sauce, sprinkle with grated cheese and top with bread Paradol crumbs. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for 30 minutes- This wakes an excellent supper or lunch dish on a chilly day. ' a Glazed Stuffed Onions + sold into the meat trade. !: 6 large onions Penitent over our own contributions cup chopped celery 2 tablespoons chopped parsley due only, partly or wholly, to the ad- 3 tablespoons bacon or beef drip help'us get a new decency and a new pings k< 2 cups soft bread crumbs ` riz teaspoon salt "am, teaspoon pepper 41 :N1LW5NWu.A.MCWeIk.WW .YJ.. M1G.:::So"'.PWW .WN.YY�.W[iA(.siN[5'�W�� fir 2 tablespoons corn syrup or honey 2 tablespoons hot water 1 tablespoon fat. 'Peel onions and cut in half. Place in large saucepan and cover with boiling water. Cook gently for 15 minutes or until partly tender. Drain carefully so onions will remain in- tact. Remove centres of onions (without disturbing the layers) and chop them fine. Cook celery and parsl y in drippings for five 'minutes, using low heat to avoid browning. b salt and Pepper crams a Add b d and the chopped onion centres. Fill onion shells with this stuffing. Ar- range in greased -baking dish. Com- bine syrup or honey with hot water and fat. Use this mixture, a few spoonfirp at a time, to baste onions whileey are baking. Bake in an oven (350 degrees) until the onions are tender. Yield: 6 servings. Bnion Dumplings 6 large onions 1 cup soft bread crumbs it lb. sausage meat Salt and pepper Plain pastry Tomato ..sauce. Parboil onions in salted water for 20 to 30 minutes. Drain well. Re- move a portion of the onion centres. Chop the part, removed. Saute saus- age -meat to brown slightly, then com- bine it with the chopped onion and the soft bread crumbs. Pack in cen- tres of onions and allow onions to stand until cool. Roll out plain pas. .try- Cut in squares sufficiently large to wrap around onions in the same fashion as apple dumplings. Bake in oven (450 degrees) for 15 minutes Then reduce heat to 375 degrees and I! ake ;3p vgJputea 1•ouger Serve wilt' _ )mato, sauce, Yield: 6 'servingd, The Question Box Mrs. G. M GM. asks: Can I seubsti- Lite equal quantities of baking' pow• ler for cream of tartar in a' cake ecipe? Answer: No. You use one tea. poo., baking powder instead of one- Lalf teaspoon cream of tartar and kne-quarter teaspoon baking soda— he baking soda will also be listed in he recipe. Mrs. S. 1 asks: Should window creens be varnished 'or painted? Answer: A protective coating o; pecial varnish is recommended. Mrs. W. K. asks: Why do ligh rulbs burn out in a short time? • Answer: If your bulbs burn ou requently, ask your electrical deale] Nhat voltage bulbs you should us+ ind check with the label on you: .amps. Buy a long -life lamp. Mrs. B. C. says: I tried to clear b in electric percolator y boiling ' baking soda solution in it, but the mixture boiled over continuously. Answer: Use a weak solution o baking soda—about Yz teaspooh to ,up watel• and keep stirring it while the percolator is plugged. in. A twc minute boil is required. Anne Allan invites you to write t tier c/o The Huron Expositor, $en in your suggestions on homemakin problems and watch this column to replies. Sugar Rations For Dis- charged Service Personne All service personnel whose app] cation for ration books is dated o or before October 31st may obtai the twenty coupons for sugar for car ning, according to an announcemei of W. Harold McPhillips, prices an supply representative for Wester Ontario. Further than this, Mr- M Phillips said that all ration boot issued to discharged men and wome after October 31st and up until D cember 31st of this year should co: tain ten extra preserves coupons f< sugar for canning. This Would I over and above the current preserv( coupons which would be in the boo An intimate; picture of the fears and the hopes 4f the moving peoples of Europe sine the end of hostilities is given by' a veteran relief worker, ,Francesca *lson, who has returned to London • after six months work, as a welfar@ officer in the camps for dis- placed persons of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administra- tion. The first reaction of liberated peo- ple was an overwhelming desire to break everything that had been touch- ed by Germans, Miss Wilson said. Instruments of, -three German orches- tras were found broken -to pieces in cellars of the first camp she went to at Feldafing. People behave animals, is, d like tak- ing ing food and hiding away while they ate it. They had a peculiar glassy stare. First the feeling of repulsion on the part of relief workers soon gave way to sympathy as they re- alized the people's need to tell their experiences. Sufferings were related in a detached way as though they had happened to someone else. Where Will They Go? The French and ,Belgians soon went home, Miss Wilson said. The major- ity of 5,000 who remain at Feldafing are Polish Jews. "The great problem for these peo- ple is a moral vacuum which arises when for some reason they cannot go back to their homes," Miss Wilson said. "They are burning to . know where they can go; they're burning, to begin a new life. Miss Wilson speaks Russian and L talked to many Baltic peopies in this language. There was an upstanding young Lithuanian who said be could - i n't go back. When asked if he was afraid of, the Russians he said he. had no reason to be. He couldn't go back to a home now where he had had a wife, children, and relatives, and where npw there would be nothing deft but bitter memories. He must .FARM MACHINERY OFF RATION LIST za,ore, anti taste a suori exposure or a corner of the room, includingsome All rationing controls have been removed from sales of farm machinery, and PN V restrictions on the production or importation of such machinery have been lifted. Price controls remain. Generally,, maximum price for form implements is the price :rrs at which such items sold during the basic period, August 15—September 11, 1941. open. Quoted prices do not include cost of delivery to the purchaser. ' Under Consumers' Credit Order No. 225, section 10, terms of sale for farm mach- sheet step into the corner, and open ineryrare: 1/3 of quoted°`price paid in cash; the balance of the credit price to be paid take at any time—but even more withirr two years of the date of the contract' in stated amounts at specified, dates., Any allowance for a trade-in is to be deducted from the unpaid balance. exposure. With correct exposure Despitethe lifting of production restrictions, it is expected that the shortage of easy tricks, you can get effects that companentssur as malleable castings and sheet steel will limit the maximum output of-feirrii inipai nts during the year July 1, 1445, to •June 30, 1946, to a 24% increase .. (on°Wtonnage basis) over the output in the preceding 12 months.' Odd lighting -effects are simple, Farmers" Poultry PACes Potato Storage Allowance F Farmers selling all types of poultry, (Order A-1560 now in effect) pveral shots with different ez except turkeys, direct to consumers are A'storage allowance of 5c per 75 -Ib. bag obtain a strange "firelight" effect permitted a 25%'markup over the whole- of potatoes and 7c per 100 -Ib. bag is ' safv� ceiling prices established for the zone allowed on November 1. Another 5c per Welvd, pictures are not all of flat% in which they are located. Turkey producers 754b. bag and 6c per 100 -Ib. bag may be floor in trout of your subjects. Don't are allowed a 20% markup over the added on December 1, and anorher 5c per ' wholesale level. 75 -Ib. bag and 7c per 100 -Ib. bag on tume parties, rich in Ilossibilities s Junuary 1, 1946. There will be no storage ' adjustment for February but monthly in- creases will be resumed on March 1. with odd lightings and shadow ef- a4. FAME S' ATIOP1 COUPONS at the bottom of •a long cardboard Coupons covering farmer sales or farm household consumption of meat and butter, and ' sales of preserves must be forwarded to Local Ration Boards in primary producerst envelopes And Hallowe'er. pt1epeilti'Jbn' s pr0- (RB -61). Reports for November should reach the Local Ration Boards not later than December 10... top orthe folie• just below his chin, Following are the valid coupon dates for November: MEAT BUTTER SUGAR PRESERVES a splendid •pieture-Obey opt of the. November 1...... M 9 . 128 .. .: Wbeiril , tbaclows are picture -ms- 8...... M 10 .. .. .. . m " 15...... M 11 129 66,67 P 20, 21 tures 'showing the piit'feluee of the. " 22...... M. 12 130 .. i " 29...... M 13 131 d .. .. Farmers are required to send in "M" coupons to the local Ration Board for meat they result grinf►i ` frosrl " 4 uil►t- vind0a consume, and meat they sell to farmer neighbours at the rate of 4 (lis': per coupon. Farmers who slaughter meat need rot t+-rr, in at the end of the month more than half the valid meat.. coupons in the ration books of their household. Farmers who purchase meat from other farmers must surrender to the selling farmer one meat coupon for every 4 lbs. of meat purchased, even if this means surrendering coupons not yet valid. Paradol FAR 1`1 SL U HTERERS Farmers who slaughter for their own"household consumption or for the consumption of their farmer neighbours, are not required to hold a slaughter permit. Any excess of farm t:: slaughtered meat over the farmer's or his neighbour's needs may be sold only to the holder 40, f a regular slaughter permit in quantities not less than a. quarter of Beef or a side of Pork. for—a peril more, deadly today than jr5heep, lamb or calves slaughtered by the farmer for his own or his neighbours' use may not be + sold into the meat trade. "Brown bread" is not necessarily a Licensed slaugliferer's quotas for cattle have been temporarily suspended and until Penitent over our own contributions further notice a licensed slaughterer may slaughter all the cattle needed for his requirements. is your assurance of a fair share: due only, partly or wholly, to the ad- is a protection against waste ... shbdages : a- inflation: help'us get a new decency and a new That is why farmers are asked to continue fo collect and turn in coupons to their Loral 'Ration Boards—once a month ' in the RS -61 envelope. Far further infarmnfion apply fo the tlearei:t office -df }Ne Wartime Prices and Trade AoarA. ^ 4"* "am, 1 (The Christian Science l(orlitgF� begin a new life. Outside the camp in villages there were vast numbers of liberated peo- pie for whom n9body cared. Cheated on Rations "I spent time going round these villages looking after these people," Miss Wilson said. They were suppos- ed to have additional rations, but Pressure had to be brought'on the burgomasters before these people ware given their 2,000 calories. Miss Wilson found a "refreshing frankness and gaiety" about the Sov- iet citizens to whom she talkel. They were extremely loyal and proud of their coon ry, , but willing to criticize I t. They ha • a great thirst for know- ing more about Western peoples from whom they' had been cut off for so long, "I talked to 150 Russian officers," she said, "who worked under the lash for three years in deep coal mines where they were beaten and ill-treat- ed. But they weren't broken by their experiences. They had .roots. They had 'a country to return to," Sad Plight of Jews With the Jews it was a different story. They had no roots. Nearly all their little children had gone. They; were all "on their way home to Pal- estine"' which direction they were 'go- ing. Jewish Poles are still fleeing from pogroms in Cracow, Miss Wilson said. At Fohrenwald Camp, 29 miles south of Munich, she'd been given a day's notice to receive hundreds who had fled from the fighting in Cracow in August. Since they stressed, that their government was enlightened and "horrified at pogroms," she question- ed them as to who was -,causing trou- ble. They replied: "The dark mass- es," These young Jews were "idealis- tic," she found. "They want to live on the land in Palesti"iir!e and not to go to cities where there's black mar- keting and speculation—sins of their fathers—they describe these things." Camp Shows Put On At Fohrenwald camp, Miss Wilson found great talent • among different rationalities. Shows put on at camp theaters became popular in the neigh. borbood. There was a splendid Cos- sack choir. For Baltic people she bad a special word of praise. Estonians and Lithuanians are "splendid elements" in the camps, al• ways ready to act as teachers, nurs• es, or do hard, rough work when nec- essary. The American Commandant, Lieu- tenant Harness, Miss Wilson said, ran the camp on very good lines; The Army is leaving. The teams of U.N. R.R.A. workers are to run the camp themselves. There are still 3,000 per; ions left. "Tremendous Opportunity" '_Miss Wilson is the British -born author of the "Margins of Chaos" books, describing relief work during the Russian famine after World. War I. Since - then she's beer: with the Friends Relief units in nus, -ria, Yug^ oslavia, Spain and Hungary." "Tremendous opportunity" was bow she described work in tbe,first camp at. Feldafing, . Bavaria, where thou- sands of persons came from Dachas. Conditions which would. appall a new- comer to relief were taken as part of this veteran's day's work. "Yes," she said, "there was the seamy side—illict distilleries, thiev- ing, and so on—but those are prob ,ems with which the relief worker expeeis to deal." Feldafing camp was formerly a Hit- ler Youth School. The Nazi youth fled. Liberated people took over their magnificently equipped camp. "It was ironical that this camp should be turned into a refuge for a remnant of Jewry," .Miss Wilson said. The Price of Peace Humility, penitence, economic jus- tice and mercy constitute the Price of Peace, declared the Rev. Everett W. Palmer, Chaplain of the Camden (N.J.) Lions Club in a recent ad- dress. For many of us, he said in part, the coming of -.-peace is ai%-,es- perience like that of a condemned Prisoner in "death row" who sudden- ly is given pardon and freedom. For all of us a dark and •hideous night is ended, burdens of anxiety lifted, and the glorious music of hope set ring- ing—hope for the reign of lasting peace. Mankind in the past has not been able to establish a reign of peace be- cause it has not paid the price of peace, said the speaker. "By some strange stupidity and perversity we have been willing to pay whatever crushing cost war has required, but have been unwilling to shop beyond the 5 and 10 -cent store for peace. It history and Christianity have- any. thing to teach us today, it is this: We shall have the peace we Want when we pay the price for it, and never till then]" And what is the price? Each nation must be humble enough to think leas of Its own rights and more of the flgbts of oth'e'r men; humble enough to be teachable, to learn _ and obey the code of iniernationA;l living, Muni_ ble enough to live w'itl614 blttet'ritese off' deslre ' for relve#ge, l;ae'h nation niusf be pthitei f, AWL A, -W60460099 is. ?he .peril of the nl& In recent years this knowledge has led to new stress on ways of improy- ing the nutritional quality of bread. Brown and whole wheat bread have been emphasized, but states the Di- vision of Nutrition of the . Department of National Health and Welfare, the only guarantee of the presence of the germ, scutellum and aleurone, which contain the nutrients and are color- less, is the presence onlyof -the brownish bran layers. Some Cana-, dian mills and all British mills are now producing flour which has re- tained_ in it some of these nutrients. without the bran. The white flour thus produced in Canada is called "Canada Approved Flour" and is an indication of a nutritionally improved flour. In buying bread, (therefore, the fol - moonlit graveyards, no doubt clank- za,ore, anti taste a suori exposure or a corner of the room, includingsome PN V furniture. Then, without mow fans, the weird -picture season will T4iutcan.�t�'t,eheulc,#i<ed)d`clul�o�r: 1 v open. o a t ci ' Weird pictures are interesting to sheet step into the corner, and open Just ail, oQfi3 #i aci:. el the cOU itng take at any time—but even more the camera for the second, shorter on au .evpe>t'rence'readache, pains exposure. With correct exposure easy tricks, you can get effects that In the back or lambs, soreness through smack of genuine witchery. .. the bock. take a Paradol tablet, a good Odd lighting -effects are simple, shy. through him. To be safe, OF F , bigdein of hot•leinonadc olrouger tea pveral shots with different ez obtain a strange "firelight" effect and go to bed. ' by placing your photo lights on the Welvd, pictures are not all of flat% The Paradol affords almost immed, floor in trout of your subjects. Don't lowe'en: There are children's cos- ' late relief from the pains and aohes and tume parties, rich in Ilossibilities shine on the lens. To picture a face helps you to get off to sleep. The dose floating, in air, put the photo. light with odd lightings and shadow ef- may be repeated, if necessary, accord. at the bottom of •a long cardboard feats, and they will be all the better. ' ing to the directions. U there is sore, And Hallowe'er. pt1epeilti'Jbn' s pr0- top orthe folie• just below his chin, mess of the throat, gargle with two The room lights must be tunica off, a splendid •pieture-Obey opt of the. Paradol tablets dissolved in water. Just Wbeiril , tbaclows are picture -ms- Sank o' -lantern ,.:' . a soles. of plc- • U7 Paradol the next time you have a tures 'showing the piit'feluee of the. , i Cold' and we believe that you will be 1, result grinf►i ` frosrl " 4 uil►t- vind0a well pleased. rpp udol does not disap point. Dr. Chase's Paradol for—a peril more, deadly today than lowing facts should be kept in mind: + any enemy we faced in years of war. "Brown bread" is not necessarily a Penitent over our own contributions whole wheat bread. Its color may be toward the past conflict, God can due only, partly or wholly, to the ad- ' help'us get a new decency and a new dition of molasses or a bit of bran. intelligence, the righteousness and There is no government control over " wisdom which make for peace. bread labelled "Whole Wheat Bread" Another constituent of the price of to guarantee that the bread contains peace, declared the Rev. Mr. Palmer, whole wheat. Government • tested is economic justice for all nations— "Canada Approved Vitamin B Bread," r and finally, mercy. "The whole world . white or brown, is the wisest buy. today is a highroad to Jericho, and — mankind is crying out for mercy. It Grade Fox Pelts is a cry which calls us to be Good Samaritans, to give wheat and steel, All ranched fox pelts marketed r and' beyond that, understanding and mercy. Only mercy can heal the I through an auction house or 'market - ing organization must be graded in ' wounds of war. Only mercy can drain off the poison of bitterness accordance with the regulations un- + from the earth and cause to flow the der the Live Stock and Live Stock recreating power of Good Will." Products Act, 1939, wespecting the , grading of ranched fox -pelts. _ All ranched fox pelts purchased by Bread Talk a transient buyer or dealer from. a producer must have the pelts graded + Hows Whys in accordance with the regulations T and before being offered for sale. Buyers During the course time, millers of fox pelts must identify each lot ' of of producer's pelts when purchased, have been producing whiter and so as to retain the identity until whiter flour. Many reasons, have they are graded and a grading cer- been advanced for this evolution, tificate issued. Identification 'must be ranging from the class-conscious per- by means of a statement showing son wanting to avoid the brown bread the date of purchase, and name and I of the poor to the idea that white address of both purchaser and pro - flour keeps better. Little did the ducer. Any person may apply to the millers suspect when they discarded Dominion Department of Agriculture the germ and bran from wheat to or to an inspector for the grading of produce white flour that they were his pelts. throwing away valuable vitamins and ' minerals In recent years this knowledge has led to new stress on ways of improy- ing the nutritional quality of bread. Brown and whole wheat bread have been emphasized, but states the Di- vision of Nutrition of the . Department of National Health and Welfare, the only guarantee of the presence of the germ, scutellum and aleurone, which contain the nutrients and are color- less, is the presence onlyof -the brownish bran layers. Some Cana-, dian mills and all British mills are now producing flour which has re- tained_ in it some of these nutrients. without the bran. The white flour thus produced in Canada is called "Canada Approved Flour" and is an indication of a nutritionally improved flour. In buying bread, (therefore, the fol - moonlit graveyards, no doubt clank- za,ore, anti taste a suori exposure or a corner of the room, includingsome ing their chains. And for camera furniture. Then, without mow fans, the weird -picture season will ing the camera or winding the film, open. have a subject draped in a white ' Weird pictures are interesting to sheet step into the corner, and open take at any time—but even more the camera for the second, shorter fin at Hallowe'en. And with a few exposure. With correct exposure easy tricks, you can get effects that the "ghost" will be tranmarent-7 smack of genuine witchery. aitd the furniture or wallpaper will, Odd lighting -effects are simple, shy. through him. To be safe, OF � In a group ,picture indoors, you can pveral shots with different ez obtain a strange "firelight" effect posure times. ' by placing your photo lights on the Welvd, pictures are not all of flat% floor in trout of your subjects. Don't lowe'en: There are children's cos- ' let the lights show in the finder or tume parties, rich in Ilossibilities shine on the lens. To picture a face for "memory" snapshots., Take them. floating, in air, put the photo. light with odd lightings and shadow ef- + at the bottom of •a long cardboard feats, and they will be all the better. tube' --and let the fsubjech held the And Hallowe'er. pt1epeilti'Jbn' s pr0- top orthe folie• just below his chin, vide pitt'lre chances. 'Pott ch.n make The room lights must be tunica off, a splendid •pieture-Obey opt of the. Wbeiril , tbaclows are picture -ms- Sank o' -lantern ,.:' . a soles. of plc- • teristl. H b' a-'•adbj"t in ' witch tures 'showing the piit'feluee of the. , costumer• stand lid front of a photo pumpkin, the carving, and thq� APal, bulb a tl"_ pint re, th "' 8t "' result grinf►i ` frosrl " 4 uil►t- vind0a shai(oog o6t �It4t66'4JlliiL lnd'eed, ii flolliti'et► ttreteis; Or, place a ifgliti c%gi ,ta thts wall,. go�fr 4A ll ai0*0At'for thb camet'al.; v to illunifttete it> tixigttttyi°'a7dA,,ltdt tet.yb,Yrb: yriioty your osul 1ba cit bet*bdii the Camera Joh mn`%�ildet ' -A •. ..., � ,.,''.fit •, ..� .,�:4t .. ... ,. �.. .... . �.. ..1.. ,n.w. ,