HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1953-07-10, Page 7eunion
The 170 fih'rotitop *TO.. aa
Idson rewiI f was'heId at the Ligiva
R'ai k, ,c5daiiol'•th, . -On Wednesday,
414r tliamg,goggtlk membefa At
tended. After dinner the president,
Adam Hamilton, Laatowel, con uot-
lea the Wetness Meeting. The isec '
retary-treasurer gave Cher;,• report
!and the
� group obserged -a 'ipnin#tke'a}
finance in`naemory of the nine mem-
Imre who had passed away during
the year. c a r .
Prizes weir given to M'r. Arthlw
ittte'wart, Curry's' Corner„ Nova„rSilta•
tie, for coming the farthest; to Mrs
John Spice for the oldest lady; to
Nel<aoIL 4 amiltoil.. for the . oldest`,
man;a to
r. d Mr . son
Nel ' • ,
Ilton for being- thelongest mar,'
Fled;c:to Mr. and 111 .,.,dam Remit
Coro for being ost recentl
ed
t
l
toners' a
a NOIt
� or
to f- rite
blathaay 'Marcia .the date of the,
pi4i,Lic; to Mr. 9 *VS. Jack Ham
Ston
for r •
o the. t f
g. 1 •" t ,
�l# es' ami
Y. a
Rfehard
Orth, youngest baby, and
to Margaret Ann Hamilton, yot},pg-
eaI baby ,girl.
'he following officers for 1954
Were elected: president, Adam
Hamilton; vice-president, George
Hamilton; secretary -treasurer, Mrs.
My staff and I
are at your service!
Families, individuals, and business ,e;
firms not just in this community,
but all across Canada, know our
record for cogavenielit, dependable
and friendly banking service. We
can help you with your financial
problems. Won't you come in and
discuss them with us?
J. R. M. Spittal
Branch Manager
THE
MINION
BANK
0 82 YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE CANADIAN PEOPLE
es -1t
•
Moottaiteg "tri Taaki ii);
15 . degrees 'Of barn. temperature, a
;;condition which limit& the opera-
tion
peration of`•a natural Aran system. .,
Methods of conatraetiorl of -the
outlet* and intakea for Cboth tuatura
draft and fan .ventilatifalt Systems
number andiof
s zee, ,sgopenfn
sulation requirements,' andbarn
•temperatures requiredy the var-
ious classes of liveptook are given
in detail in the publication. C
Write for "Principles of Barn
Ventilation," Publication 859, to In
formation Service, •Department of
Agriculture, Ottawa, Ont.
Filtering Milk on the Farm
Filtering milk should be consid-
George Milne; social convener,
Mrs. Parker Fogliff; sports conven-
er, Mervyn Hamilton. •
Race results, under the convener -
ship of Mervyn Hamilton, were:
three years and ander, Janice Sil-
lery; five years and under, Judy
Hamilton; boys, seven avid under,
Gary Orth; girls, 10 and under,
Marilyn Adapts; girls, 13 and un-
der,
nder, Carol Ann Morse.
Young ladies' rage, Leona Gibb;
young, men's race, Douglas Hamil-
ton; married ladies' race, Mrs. A.
Orth; married men's race, Lorne
Morse; three-legged race, Doris
Sillery and Harvey Craig; kick -the -
shoe, ladies, Mrs. George Milne;
men, Sam Sidwell • throw the •ball,
ladies, Dorothy Hamilton; men,
Douglas Hamilton; most graceful
walking lady, Mrs. Annie Wright.
Members -decided to hold the re-
union next year at Listowel on
July 1.
1
Join in the excitement of inviting your friends to come to ONTARIO --
Canada's All Year Vacation Province.
Let a postcard or Ietter-be your personal invitation now to friends in other
pails of Canada or in the United States to visit ONTARIO. Ask them to
enjoy. ,a •real family holiday where accommodation is good and rates are
easy on flu; vacation budget.
ONTARIO offers hundreds of attractions which will appeal to any taste.
Visitors can be assured of heart-warming hospitality with memorable happy
holiday, experiences wherever they choose to go amid ONTARIO'S 52
Vacation Areas.
Your Department of Travel and Publicity will send illustrated literature to
your friends with your compliments if you fill in and mail the coupon below.
rl " ONTARIO TRAVEL compliments the winners In the recent letter -writing contest,
The appreciation of the Department is expressed to each student of the thousands
' who submiHed an entry. They wish also to "sank those teachers throughout the
ProvInce• Whb •loopetdied tdith+Ishidents.in making the. Contest such,,a succors,
Ai` O V i A R. I0 .6t. '.AT6 eaV' 7 tAni 1 . cteA :
Id Pang and PRIZI
$400,00 Government Sond $460.00 Government Send
RHODA SVENSIL
R.R. fl
Malaya
JOHN GRANT
62 Riverside Drive
Kapuskasln0
3rd pain (ere)
$100.00 Government ease sod, •
DOLORES LONG, HSP DdRY
809 Donald S1., and College of 51, Joseph
Fort William North Ray
. eaaataia‘ii
ateaaraaa
y
ti
ONTARIO GRAVrLROOM 5050
rree.51 COLLEGE ST, TORONTO, ONTARIO
PLEASE SENONWITtd MY COMPLIMENTS
FREE MAP ANNTANIORTMOATION AYOOT
puss carni
Whiners et•oddlnonat
cash prises have
been n•1l•ed by
rnglatered mal.
re0t.OIITAse -
:1
URf
i
vorcbnne; *+Carie
n have bnth ed daring miikind:
its important to.safeguard 014 alael-
sty. +.1, he consumer is entitled to as
clears milk era it is prartihal to
produce:
The factors to be considered
'selecting a farm strainer are; (1)
efficiency of filtering; (2) speed of
filtering, (3) ) ei9e of cleaning; n
g, (4)
amount of milk One filter disc Will
strain; and (5) coat-,
The speed at which milk can be
filtered is important not only as a
time saver, but to prevent .slowing
down the milking routine.. To re-
duce the time required • to filter
milk, a method of indreasing the
filtering area of the cotton filter
disc was tented by the Dairy Sec-
tion, Animal Husbandry Division,
Cen,Irata Experimental alarm, Ot-
tawa. ILI, the use of a monel metal
screen, mesh 10 x 10 or 8 x 8.,
gauge 22 or 24, •cut to fit a stand
and strainer and .placed in :the bot-
tom of the strainer ahead of the
cotton filter disc, the time required
for the same grade and quantity to
pass through the strainer was re-
duced by 60 per cent when compar-
ed with the same strainer with the
standard metal disc.
This demonstrates, says Research
Officer C. A. Gibson, that the speed
of filtering milk on the farm is de-
termined by the area of the open-
ings
penings in the strainer; not by the
area of the supporting disc. There-
fore, in the selection of a farm
abrainer consideration should be
given to the open area of the sup-
porting disc. Under practical con-
ditions the metal screen was not
difficult to keep clean and free
from milk stone.
Fire in Downtown Shed .
Caused Little Damage
Little damage followed when fire
broke out in a storage shed early
Saturday evening, behind the Main
Street garage of M. E. Clarke. The
blaze was quickly brought under
Control after the alarm was rung
about 7 p.m. fend answered by the
Fire Brigade. According to Chief
John Scott, some boys were playing
around an old stove in the shed
and may have got careless • with
matches, The shed is owned by
Mr. Clarke.
rken4erl3'et #ho 04'.0't fiicP
reople itJ;iet 1zl tiie elaj>l&tQR1s4'
oe tiho •ohurch recetutly,,
e'eriptttre• le#$9n.srap rtau fly
Ro;3 ' illson and Joycgt J,ewitt• eve
cti{e ittlptu oft 'Faith. dud .$vangel-
'?ism,” Minutes of the lotmeeting
were read and adopted. The straw-
Merry festival is. cancelled and the
women are .,having a plauy and ice
oream and pie social. The roll call
wee • answered s Bred by eight members.
The collection amounted to $1.70
n the business session song
books were diacuesed. Contests
were conducted by Joyce Jewitt,
and lunch was served.
HYDRO
HQME ECONOMIST
DESSERTS
Hello Homemakers! Most people
believe that a dish of sweet berries
and cream cannot be improved
upon. (This saves time and ener-
gy for other household chores). Do
be cautious about serving clean
raw fruit, Sort berries and dis-
card soft, mouldy and under -ripe
ones and, rinse in a sieve under
cool water. Then tumble the ber-
ries into a bowl and sprinkle sugar
on layers of fruit. Sugar syrup
may also be used for sweetening to
eliminate stirring fruit which' may
make it unattractive. To bring out
the juice allow prepared fruit to
stand in the refrigerator an hour or
so.
At least once during the season
you should prepare those old faT-
•orites; fresh berry pie and short-
cake with whipped cream. Never
worry about serving berries twice
a day while they are plentiful. Ber-
ries used in gelatines give a fresh
flavor or crushed with fine sugar
and served generously on ice cream
or puddings is always easy to pre-
pare.
For different desserts made with
t1IeIi
.andY, dig. c II
IIiMi l errs phi fon "Pte
2 Cups, ;Pa:
lea r
1 pkg. rleni...elatlne
eu� .
1
.. i►9 112:$
.ter icup w,liid cream
1.";Iteatea egg whites,
lrahaln cracker' ,shell.
Pick over and rinse berrlee, Re
serve 4 crap for gnrnish.lug;. +crush
the remainder. Prepare lemon
n
gelatine powder and when
D it be,'
guns to thicken, fold in whipped
egg whites. Pour ,filling into pie
shell and chill in refrigerator.
Garnish with cream and whole ber-
ries. Makes 1 ('9 -inch) pie..
Cherry Roly Poly
21, cups" pastry flour
3 taps. baking powder
1 tap. salt
1/4 cup sugar
2/3 cup shortening
1 egg
2/3 cup milk
2% cups pitted cherries
1 cup sugar.
!Mix and sift Sour, baking .pow-
der, salt and sugar. Cut in short-
ening until like coarse meal. Beat
egg and add milk, then stir into
dry ingredients until dough con-
sistency.
onsistency. Roll out a,4 inch thick on
floured board. Mix cherries with
sugar and place in a rowjn centre
of dough. Dampen edges and told
over top and press ends, envelope
fashion. Make about three gashes
across top. Place on shallow pan
or pie plate. Bake in preheated ov-
en•of 350 degrees for 45 minutes.
Husbands! Wives!
Want new Pep and Vim?
Thousands of couples are weak, worn-out, ex-
hausted solely because body lacks iron. For new
vim, vitality,try Ostrez Tonic Tablets, Supplies
iron you, to, may need for pep- aupplenren-
a�uaiinn�ted V size nllyBl•t 00 �At alll'yarora
V1� pRt�
FA
silni r with;water�
afift. Press, the i'r ..
sieve, then AUL. 2'p1„
wlillp•ed (areal} '4.0, cherry',
t
tR e.. F a it
P a.,
�t4t
c� 'u
,glasses, sprinkle • .a few '
c
madefrom erusolB�eFitL
l
s- on.� ; .For to' T •
!
cherry
'ivTake' el,,
44er=0
A -erri .a 'ona P0tora pn, 0. 44414,03
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SBAi.FOR OTUI, .E1 TT
OFEN OILY -- ✓PHONR,d
T. PRYDE. & SON
ALL TYPED OP CEMETERY MEMORIALS,
Enquiries are invited. 1
Exeter -
Phone 41-J
Phone 193
x
oriamarearenamommormeeemaowerenewasseeserwerao
AUSABLE ' RIVER
CONSERVATION AUTHORITY
ottage Lots
FOR 2t -YEAR -LEASE
At any time after 4:00 p.m. Saturday, June 27,
cottage lots along the Ausable River at Port
Franks may be reserved on deposit of $50.00 to.
cover the first year's rent.
Plan and requirements are available with G. C. Henderson, Thed-
ford, and the Authority Field Officer, F. G. Jackson, will be avail-
able by appointment at Port Franks to show applicants the
property.
AUSABLE RIVER
CONSERVATION AUTHORITY
Modolby moi' .1. . . mile
Thriftiest movers of them it
The strikingly new
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advertisement tor the business
it serves—model 2271 Max,
G.V.W. 4100 lbs.
Good appearance and
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G.V.W.'s 4800, 5800, 7000 pounds.
The Carryall Suburban takes"
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supplies. Model 9316. Max. G.V.W. 4800 lbs.
.00
A truck for every
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providing chassis and cabs windshield cowls,
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Powered by the famous 235.5 cu. in.
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With many outstanding features. 9500
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An ideal truck for heavy hauling up to 16000
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mastiff engine.
A wide variety of special body types
Mr be used to advantage on these 9800
series Cab -Over -Engine models. Power -
plant is the husky GMC 235.5 Laad-
master engine.
MODEL for model, feature for feature, these 1953 trucks are
the greatest GMC trucks ever built. They bring you new
staying power and new safety with heavier, more rigid and
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The big, rugged, 15,000 pound rear axle teams
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is the 9700 Heavy Duty Series.
Multi -stop deliveries are made easier with
the GMC 9100 Series chassis (flat face
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wide variety of needs, chassis are avail-
able in either 11:000 or 14,000
with choice of 125 in., 137 in. or 161 in.
wheelbase.
A
GENERAL MOTORS
VALUE
But there's only -one way to really know What advantages are
waiting for you in these new GMC's—
Drive one yourself!
Your GMC dealer will put 'you behind the wheel of one of the
wide variety of models available. You'll thrill to the drive of
sparkling horsepower—the lift of responsive high compression
—the solidity and stamina which will enable you to save more
and make more on every hauling job—with GMC.
Pt
a
k
GMC -5536
SON
GILBERT MOTORS, Seaf
17