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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1949-02-10, Page 6Pag. 6 THE. TlMES-AOVOCATk EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY IP, 1949 A lady checking over ’the gro­ cery bill found this. item: “One tom cat—fifteen cents", Indig­ nant, she called up her grocer and demanded an explanation. “Q h, that’s u 11 right, M r s. Jones,” explained the grocer, “that’s pn abbreviation for toma- to catsup.” Feminine Facts n Fancies About 70 per cent of Canad­ ian homes are wired for electric­ al service. OUT OF THIS WORLD’ That’s one way to describe the marvelous flavor of Maxwell House. It contains choice Latin-American coffees-—expertly blended «—• Radiant Roasted to the peak of coffee goodness. A Page Devoted to the Interests of the Women Readers of The Times-Advo^ate / V. Decorate Now . . . Paper Removed Papering Painting Prices Reduced At This Season Of The Year! Phone 413J Hatter and Durand Main St. W.A. - The February meeting of the Main Street W, A. was held at the home of Mrs. HR. Hopper. Mrs. Earl Russell took charge of the Devotional Period. The meeting opened with hymn 311, followed by prayer. The Scripture lesson, Psalm 733, was read by Mi’s, C. Blowes. A poem "Folks Need a Lot of Loving” was read by Mrs. H. Jensen. Mrs. Russell gave a very interesting story. Hymn 15 was sung, after which, Mrs, Benson Tuckey, the charge of the business-’ Plans were made to hold Baking Sale on February The meeting closed with the Mizpah Benediction. Lunch was served by the group in charge. The March meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Collier. C.W.L. Meets The Catholic Women’s League held its monthly meeting’in the Legion rooms ch Friday, ruary 7, at 8 pan. with ,a number in attendance. The minutes of (the last ing were read and passed, for future social evenings discussed. The meeting was closed by the blessings of Father Davig- non. Feb- large nieet- Plans were president, took a 26. s Beauty Shoppe Exeter and District’s Most Modern Slioppe Have you consulted us about the NEW RADIO’WAVE ? A11 Types of Permanents, Cold, Heat and Machineless All lines of Beauty Culture Vera C. Fraser, prop. Tel: 112 Exeter Dobbs^Helmkay The parsonage of Rev, BeweJll of Barrie was the scene of a quiet wedding on January 22 when vows were spoken by Jean Kathleen Helinkay, young­ est daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Helmkay, of Avening, •and Lawrence Alton Dobbs, the youngest son of Mr. and Mino? Dobbs, of Glencairn. The bride was lovely rayol blue street length dress with lace yoke and cap sleeves, with a corsage of pink roses and fern. The bride’s sister, Mrs. Mur­ ray Hall, wore a wine velvet dress, with a corsage of white sweetpeas. The groom’s attend- ent was Murray Halls. After the ceremoney they had dinner in a Barrie cafe. For travelling, the bride chose a winter white coat with brown accessories. The couple will side in Glencairn. Mrs, in a crepe Triyitt Auxiliary The Womans's Trivjtt Memorial at the Crawford, ance. The president, Mrs. Beirl- ing, opened the meeting with the Litany and prayers. Mrs- Carew read the scripture lesson. Mrs. Beirling gave <an- explanat­ ion, concerning the alterations in The Members Prayer, recent­ ly made by the Dominion Board. Mrs. Vernon Heywood read an interesting story of the now famous St. Paul’s, His Majesty’s Chapel of the Mohawks, at Brantford, the oldest Protestant Church in the province. A chapter of the new study book was given, by Mrs. Middleton. It was decided to hold the annual pancake supper on .Shrove Tues- Tlie meeting closed with benediction. The hostess served a dainty lunch and a social hour followed. Auxiliary of Church, met Mrs. Robert good attend- lipnie pf with a Hurondale W.l The Hurondale W.l, was held Feb, 3, at the home of Mrs, C. Down. The meeting was post­ poned a week owing to the death of Mrs. Peter Moir. Thd meeting opened with the "0 d e”, followed by singing “Some Folks Do”. The Lords Prayer was repeated in unison. The roll call was answered "what foreign country I would like to see best and why.” The minutes of the last meeting were read and adapted. Communicat­ ions were read. Mrs. E. J, Pym gave the report for the shut-in Committee. The Institute discussed of catering to a banquet for the Junior Farmers. Mrs. A. Rundle took the chair for the program, opening with "Danny Boy.” Mrs. W. Kernick gave the motto "the pleasure of doing good is one that never wears out.” Mrs. T. Campbell favoured with a piano instrumental. Mrs. R. Jeffrey gave an interesting paper Huron County. A chorus was rendered seven ladies, as follows; Mrs. Sims, Mrs. E. Mitchell Mrs. Beckler, Mrs. L. Reynolds, Mrs. A. coippanied by Mrs. H. the piano. -Mrs. W. <Sims then interesting talk on China. Cur­ rent events were given by Mrs. B'. Case. Areading by Mrs. M. Beckler and Mrs. E. Mitchell, "Why I am a member of the Institute.”. Mrs. A. Rundle gave a review of the Tweedsmieur History of Hurondale, Mrs. A. Moir moved a vote of thanks to all taking part in the program, and to Mrs. Down for the use of her home, the meet­ ing closed by singing "God.. Save the King. A Dutch auction ,of a blanket was won Lunch was served and committee. . Anyone wishing kets made please •Mrs. Alvin Moir’s Sillery’s. The next meeting be held at the home of Mrs. W. Etherington. (north of Bell Telephone) Naturelle Permanent Waving Lustron Cold Wave Open Wednesday. Afternoon Dorothy G. Reeder, prop. Tel. 71 Exete?Caven Circle Meets The ladies of Caven Congn ational Circle held their Febru­ ary meeting at the home of Mrs. A. Mitchell. The meeting opened With the hymn "Standing by a Purpose True.” Devotional exer­ cises were taken by Miss Hatter, reading from the 91 Psalm and prayer. Roll call was answered by 21 members and three visit­ ors telling their fovourite holi­ day, The minutes of the last meeting -were read and approved and business was discussed. Mrs. McInnis and Mrs. Kirk Of the Gift Committee thentook over and called Mrs. Ed. Pollen to the center- of the room. Mrs. McInnis then , (presented Mrs. Pollen witha beautiful cup and saucer and read the following ■address. Dear Tena— We wish to welcome you into our circle and to join with us in our activities. We extend to you our best wishes for a happy wedded life are pleased you are remaining in Exeter. Therefor at this time we would ask to accept this gift and hope enjoy it. eg- Hairdressing Permanent Waves Cold Waves - Phone 14S -day. the hostessJames St. Auxiliary The February meeting of James Street Evening Auxiliary was held on Monday night at the home of Mrs. S. B. Taylor. The meeting opened with Hymn 259, followed by prayer. The roll call was taken and the minutes were read. The reports from the other seretaries read. Mrs. Anne Alderson, as leader, took charge of the ing. Hymn 37 8 was sung, lowed with Psalm 743. Mrs. A, O. Elliot favoured with a solo. Mrs. Jean Crocker played a piano solo. , The meeting closed by singing Hynin 182, followed by all re­ peating ' the benediction. Lunch was served by the group in charge. the re-Jean Hennessey were gave an Adults. adopted and the roll called. first Spring Styles have blan- EA Outstanding Quality • Delicious Flavour V /'// ////J'#' s#' ANY ANY PAIR OF QUILTSANY you you Mrs. recent Your time you if you group meet- fol- H. Love, the hostess to leave rags at or Mrs. Ed. Will need these, want by Mrs. by » In call in Wool Sweaters o Choo s e tho- hr»f—Melt bullet In 7 or 8 Inch nquore bolting <R’h, odd brown ’u°or °nd ’Pread the mixture evenly over the bottom of the . • p°re cn<1 core apple* arid cut each One Tn iectlon* fettgth- *"**' -** ‘n row* Tn th* butter-jugar mixture. Piste d therry In «och corner ond one in the middle. 3 laMetpoont butter V* tup brown Vugar •3 or 4 medium «ixed spph* J3 red or green cherries % tup ihortening Va teaspoon vanilla •xtrad cup granulated Sugor J4r teaspoon «□!! 4 teaspoons baking powder 2 cupi rifted Purity ,, Flour T tup milk Best for all• t— Agencies Located At *— Lucan, Centralia, Grand Bend, Dashwood, Hensail, Zurich, Seaforth, Biyth A i-V10,v77e1he.fc,moosf,UR,TYCOOK b°ok One Day Cleaning Service IN PLANT BY 10 A.M, — OUT BY 5 P.M. (Small Extra Charge) and Cardigans For Children And add vanilla. Gradually add Sugar end blertd «*I1 together. Add wefl-beoton 4gg. Mix: toriiy Flew', ! balnwg lewder end salt ond *ift together 3 br 4 time*, then add alternately W.th the Milk, Pouf thi* bdtter over the oppfe* in baking d«fi and bake in 6 moderate oven 135O°F.) tor 40-45 Minute*. Invert to nerve. Remove from the dish o« SOon aj baked. Serve hot as ti or With a tweet scucc, Or sbrvd cold With whipped creom. rr W • lhat’s Puricy Blour. Wmeh who bake 2nd bike depend on Parity for uniform tesults. It. s the flour that’s milled from Canada's fine hard Wheat and sold everywhere. 849-f-b irou Ntfb oniy one ftout? m *«■**.« 1 cookbook !PUR ITU' 1*1*0 OH ^e"’v Co,oary, Aha,, Voncouver, 3.C. J FO» -6'Nt «tSUlt..F»hCTlC>* I ................................ I "Afi-hhllCan Breathe If your nose some­ times fills up with stuffy transient con­ gestion-put a few drops of Va-tro-nol in each nostril. It quickly reduces con­ gestion and makes breathing easier in a hurry . . . gives- grand relief from sniffly, sneezy, stuffy distress of head colds. Follow directions in the package. vkks wwmsm Ma in St. Auxiliary . The -Main Street Evening Aux­ iliary held its regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Parkinson. The meeting was well attended with the president Alice Bowen presiding. The meeting opened by sing­ hymn 490. The minutes of R. Jeffery, Mrs, Moir ac- Strang at We Have A Lovely Selection Of (Signed) Caven Circle Miss Ballantyne and -Mrs. Cochrane presented a very inter­ esting program. Mrs. H. Mahon­ ey spoke on “The Value of ■Friendship” which was very well received by the ladies. Hatter then read from a Readers Digest “H o w Prayers are Answered”. The meeting closed with the hymn “Come to the Saviour.” The Lord’s ’Prayer was said in unison. Mrs. Wilsmith thanked the hostess and all taking part in the program. A delightful lunch was served by Mrs. Rose Russell and Mrs. McInnis. March meeting will be at the home of Mrs. G. Dow, when an auction sale will be held. ing the previous meeting were read and The business was discussed, the president then turned the meet­ ing over to group leader, Mabel Skinner. Hymn 376 was sung. Lyndia Williams led in prayer. A very interesting dialogue was given by Mrs. Layton and Vivian Balkwill. The Scripture lesson was read by Eva Penrose. A- reading was read by Dorothy Jpnes and Dorothy Hatter. The meeting closed by singing hymn 33’0, 'followed by the Mizah Benediction. A valentine contest was indulged in and lunch was served by the group in charge. Paying’ the P*idce Crowded, crooked, irregular permanent teeth are frequently part of the price that must be paid .for the premature loss, through lack iof adequate care, of the found#!ton teeth. Don’t allow your child to become a dental cripple by believing that the “baby” teeth are unimport­ ant to a child. Now is the so hurry, choice! Our Are Beginning To Come If you are interested, and lay away your choice early. For all your needs in Ladies’ & Children’s Wear Melvin’s EXETER Sanitone Cleaning Special ... is a wonderful dessert You II make it again and again and, of Course with scrumptious, such a tangy sweetness stop a feathery Cake... and per serving so economical. Grand for Hello Homemakers! It is evi­ dent, according to your letters, that more families are keeping budgets. One woman writes that desserts cost too much in com­ parison to the necessary foods such as milk, bread and veget­ ables. Perhaps we should consi­ der only desserts thaj. yield the richest food value such as cus­ tards, bread puddings and plain J fruit cups. Then, too, leftovers i can be used in attractive ways, I and servings can be calculated | So that nothing js left on the plate. Children will enjoy an Apple Custard dessert. It is made iby cooking sliced apples in a little water until they are tender. Then sprinkle with sugar and a little lemon rind. Make a plain boiled custard and pour over the apples. Chill and serve with out- meal cookies. If leftover crusts accumulate or tag ends of bread dry, toll fine and mix with brown sugar and orange rind in these pro­ portions: 1^ cups crumbs, % cUp sugar, 2 tablespoons grated rind, 1% teaspoons cinnamon—* and 2 tablespoons of butter, if you can spare it. Peel and -slice 6 apples and arrange apples and crumbs in layers. Add % cup of Water and bake In electric oven of 475 degrees for 45 minutes. Serve with foamy sauce or hot milk. A plaift cottage pudding is cheaper than cake with icing on it. Serve with, thickened juice from home canned fruit—using cornstarch to make the sauce. Gingerbread makes a delicious dessert and you can use drip­ ping instead of butter or shor­ tening when making it. Serve With marshmallow sauce or just plain squares with a glass of milk. Baked apples can be a delect­ able treat when prepared with Spiced sugar (brown sugar, cin­ namon and butter), flavoursome apples, Wash roughly, core and stuff with sugar, put them in baking cups with a little water in the bot­ tom. Bake for 40 to 60 minutes made of pearl barley, whole wheat and rolled oats, make some of the best nutritive des­ serts. Here is a good pudding made of pearl barley. PEARL BARLEY CASSEROLE 4 2U 3 1% 1 & % tablespoons pearl barley cups milk tablespoons sugar cups water egg teaspoon salt teaspoon maple flavouring Wash barley and soak over­ night. Drain off any water and Cook with the milk in double boiler. Beat egg, add sugar, salt and flavouring and stir into the barley. Pour into greased cas­ serole and bake 15 minutes at 350 degrees. Serves 5. APPLE CREAM cups milk tablespoon sugar egg whites egg yolks cups thick applesauce teaspoon lemon rind 1% 1 2 2 3 1 Scald the milk -and add ’grad­ ually to the beaten egg yolks atid sugar. Cook over hot water, stirring constantly ufitil thick. Beat in the applesauce vigor­ ously. Fold in beaten egg whites and chill. Serves 6. * DESSERT DVMPDXN’GS cups boiling Water teaspoon grated lemon find cup granulated -sugar cup lemon juice cups pastry flout teaspoon salt cup milk teaspoons baking powder tablespoons margarine cup currants tdaspoott vanilla Measure and heat in saucepan the water, sugar, rind and juice. In a bowl sift and mea­ sure flour; add baking powder and salt. Cut In margarine and stir in milk and currants. Mix lightly. Drop mixture by spoonfuls into bailing syrup, allowing enough space for dumplings to -puff dou­ ble in size. Covet -atid simmer ___ . 12 minutes—-do not lift lid dur­ in electric oven at 350 degrees, ling cooking time. Serve hot ■a't) Cereal puddings, especially those‘once. Yield; 5 or 4. 3 u % u % % 3 2 u % For February ANY PAIR OF UNLINED DRAPES ’ ANY PAIR OF CURTAINS ANY CHAIR COVER ANY PAIR OF BLANKETS ANY PAIR OF CAR COVERS OR MOTOR RUGS ANY ANY PAIR OF LINED DRAPES COMFORTER CHESTERFIELD COVER cents cents Fur and Garment Storage Shirts Beautifully Washed & Finished More People Use Sanitone 1 her Kind of -Clea EXETERPHONE 136