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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1940-05-30, Page 6PAGE SIX WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES Thursday, May 30th, 1940 is us- G a be transplanted thoroughly be- plant has been ’ soil, firm the . Re- ‘head- quan- I o N o A s o p A mIbiu oils DE ATI TE1 [ed] 2 ri [w {a IB A L E EJu ■R Rte aH s 2_ R R A3 H A M B Cui&Coda. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. ^*23 SALAM ‘TEA BAGS WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1, Charts 5. Small nail . ©.Presently 10. Filched 12. Nest of boxes 12. Squirm 14. A Siouan Indian 16. Malt beverage 17. Giver 20. Esker 21. Container 24. Persian coin 26, A wing 27. Dwarfs 30. Happen again 32. A fruit 33. To have reference 35. A dessert 36. Consumes 37. Yelp 38. Part of "to be’ 40. Wading bird 43. An obstacle 45. Maxims 49. Pointed 52. Level 53. Pendent ornament 54. A box 55. Female sheep 56. Otherwise , * DOWN 1. Servant 2. Coin of India 3. Flesh of swine .4. Hair fillet 5. Dress 6. Seaweed 7. Violoncello 8. Leg joints •10. Dashing ,11. Music note • 15. Toward 18. Wind in­ strument 19. Sloping roadway 21. Fish 22. Toward the lee 23. Mother-of- pearl 25. Biting 27. Chatter 28. Dickens’ pen name 29. Ooze 31. Western state 34. Hebrew kingdom 38. Subside 39. Kind of parrot 41. Farm animal 42. Female relative 44. Trick 46. Egg-shaped 47. Botch 48. Large knife 51. Tellurium 50. A dolt (sym) 1 2 3 H %3 6 7 Q 7 IO II 12 13 - 14 l£> db 16yb IB 17 20 21 22 23 0b 24 23 2^27 23 27 30 31 32 33 35 %36 37 38>37 40 41 42 44 46 47 4© HI 30 31 32 33 1 34 55 -I £ d 36 gMuuiiiititiiimiiiiiMiiiiitiiHiiiiiiiiiieiiiitiiiiiiniiimiiiiiiiir .£ Household Hints By MRS. MARY MORTON Baked lamb and rice Indienne is a dish which can be mixed ahead of time and baked later. For six portions use one-four.th cup minced onions, tablespoon butter, one-half teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon each pepper .and curry powder, teaspoon Worcest­ ershire sauce, three-fourths cup milk, a well-beaten egg, one and one-half cups chopped cooked lamb, one cup cooked rice, one-third cup. chopped parsley and lamb gravy. Saute onions in butter until lightly browned. Thor­ oughly mix salt, pepper, curry, Wor­ cestershire sauce. Combine milk and egg, then add curry sauce. Add on­ ions, lamb, rice, pickle and parsley, and mix thoroughly. Turn into but­ tered casserole and mould. When ready to bake, place in -pan of hot wat­ er, and bake in moderately hot oven (375 deg. F.) 45 minutes. Serve with sauce made from lamb gravy and milk thickened with flour. If less than one- half cup gravy is available use bouil­ lon cubes. Makes six portions. Date Muffins Devonshire Date Muffins, guaran­ teed to stay fresh a long time, will add interest to the menu. .Make with one cup white flour, three teaspoons bak- .irig powder, teaspoon salt, one-fourth deaspoon soda, one cup graham flour, -one-third cup brown sugar, two eggs, one cup sour cream, one cup (half package) pasteurized dates, Sift flou soda; add graham flour and brown sugar. Beat eggs, add cream and milk. Stir the mixture into dry ingredients. ■Stir in sliced dates. Bake in well- greased muffin pans in 400 deg. F, oven for 20 to 30 minutes. Roquefort French dressing improv­ es with age. Make it with one garlic •clove, three tablespoons vinegar or ball cup oil, one-half teaspoon salt, lemon juice, few grains pepper, one- one-fourth teaspoon paprika, five tablespoons of crumbled Roquefort cheese, Add remaining ingredients; j&tir vigorously with fork, Remove garlic and beat dressing thoroughly before serving. Store in glass jar. Luncheon Casserole, made in the morning, to be served at supper, is a housewife’s delight. Make it with two tablespoons bacon fat, tablespoon minced onion, tablespoon chopped celery, one-half cup milk, one-fourth cup bread crumbs, one cUp cooked pea puree, one and one-half cups chopped nuts, one egg (beaten), pepper, tea-*1 spoon salt, one-half teaspoon nutmeg. Melt bacon fat, brown onion and cel­ ery in it. Combine other ingredients and add to first mixture. Put in greas­ ed casserole dish, cover and store in refrigerator until ready to bake. Bake in 350 deg. F. oven 40 minutes. Serve with cheese or tomato sauce. Weekly Garden-Graph By DEAN HALLIDAY sliced. baking powder, salt and BARGAIN Two New Coal Oil Stoves (THREE BURNERS) PETERSON’S Rhone 1ST which lettuce is to should he “puddled” forehand, When the set in the "puddled’ earth about it as shown in the accom­ panying Garden-Graph. In order to eliminate air pockets, and because let­ tuce roots grow better when in firm contact with the soil. For two or three days after transplanting the lettuce it must be shaded from the sun. member, too, that in order to ’ up” properly lettuce must have titles of water. Lettuce which gows slowly ually tough, and the faster it can be made to grow the more tender it will be when harvested. Applications of nitrate of soda can be used to stimu­ late the growth of lettuce. Hints On Fashions Give a lift to suit or* ensemble with some good looking accessories that are smart without being extreme. A use­ ful and attractive handbag is black patent with red stitching on its decor­ ative strap which holds the two outer pockets in place. A new type of pump in patent leather is cut out all around leaving only the wall around The ramp sole also has an un­vamp. usual cut-out. Wide strap over the in­ step. White calfskin gloves have black suede insets at wrist' and cuff outlined in black hand stitching. A lovely blouse will do much for a suit. This model is of white crepe with a stitched collar band which ties in a bow centre front. Three folds down the front are stitched part way down, and plain below. RECIPES FOR JADED • APPETITES By Betty Barclay Here is a gay, colorful hors d’oeuvre plate and a tangy fruit cocktail from sunny Hawaii. Both will appeal to EASY OPENING TIN- CANNOT SPILL CALUMET BRAND DOUBLE-ACTING BAKING POWDER jaded appetites which have grown tir­ ed of heavy winter dishes. Gem Hors D’oeuvre Tray Arrange grape, lemon or geranium leaves on a plate. Place one or more nippy cheese balls/cream and Roque­ fort cheese and finely chopped celery) sprinkled with paprika in the centre, surround with canned Hawaiian pine­ apple gems rolled in chopped mint, 54 inch slices of bananas dipped in lemon juice and rolled in chopped salt­ ed peanuts, and strawberries sprink­ led with powered sugar. Hawaii Spring Cocktail 1-14 ounce can Hawaiian pine­ apple gems % cup avacodo balls or cubes 156 cups grapefruit segments Garnish—sprig mint Honey Dressing 54 cup pineapple sirup drained from gems , 54 cup lemon juice 54 cup mild honey Arrange fruit in sherbet glasses. Combine ingredients of dressing and pour over all. Garnish with-mint. Yield: 5 or 6 servings. Use Lemon with Fish Lemon’s affinity for fish and shell­ fish is well-known. Oysters or clams on the half shell;; seafood cocktails of all kinds; baked, broiled or fried fish gain by lemon juice, which may be provided In decorative lemon wed­ ges or .quarters. Canned salmon, sar­ dines or tuna should be garnished with greens and a generous supply of lemon quarters, .Again—and this is a trick worth knowing—sprinkle a bit of lemon juice on canned salmon or tuna before creaming or scalloping. HEALTH IN NEW ZEALAND New Zealand has the reputation of being a very healthy country , Ifs in­ fantile deathrate is about the lowest in the world. Its women have excellent pre-natal care. The medical and nurs­ ing professions are equal to anything found elsewhere. Recent information throws some doubt on the usually accepted health conditions prevailing amongst our cousins on the other side of the world. For one thing the New Zealanders’do not consume a proper balance of the protective foods, that is meat, fish, milk, eggs, fruits and vegetables. Most of the protective foods are fairly ex­ pensive and in consequence meat is the main first class protein used and the diet is bulked with white bread, cakes, cane sugar and tea. The New Zea­ landers are the largest meat eaters in the world, (about 250 pounds a head annually). The average daily con­ sumption of food is as follows: sugar 6 to 7 ounces; red meat one pound, white flour % a pound, milk two- thirds of a pint, egg one-third, cheese one-third an ounce, and from ’two to three ounces of butter. Most of the milk is taken by adults in tea and the egg in cakes. The evidence available shows that* 97% of school children ■have dental caries and 50% of'the peo­ ple have false ‘teeth. One in every 20 persons is in hospital every year chief­ ly for such complaints as appendicitis, diseased tonsils and goitre. The adult population Suffers considerably from digestive complaints, rheumatism and neuritis. Most of the children maintain good health until about the 8th to the 10th Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. . Established 1840. Risks taken on all classes of insur- ance at reasonable rates. Head Office, Guelph, Ont. COSENS & BOOTH, Agents Wingham. DR. R. L. STEWART PHYSICIAN Telephone 29 1 THIS SEASON brighten shabby rooms with C-l-L Semi-Gloss Mt" r<£> 1 ■ | CT f*> SEE YOUR C-/-L DEALER NOW! Machan Bros., Wingham year after which milk, cod-liver oil and orange juice are >cut down and their place taken by refined starches. By. the time children are ’ going to school dental decay has- begun though this has been tp some extent checked by *a supply,* in the last two years, of a daily half pint of milk. New Zealand eats too much pastry and cakes. The tea-drinking habits are the surprise of visitors. There is great need, as here, in education the basic principles of nutrition. in TO STIMULATE INTEREST IN ONT. FLORAL EMBLEM Ont. Horticultural Association an­ nounces contest for poems on White Trillium open to pupils of Ont. secondary schools. ■four lines. Each poem entered must ’be certi- ■ fied to by the headmaster of the • School concerned, as being the orig­ inal work of the pupil. Poems shall be forwarded to reach J. A. Carroll, Secretary, Ontario Hort­ icultural Association, Parliament Buildings, Toronto, Ontario, not later ' than JUNE 30th, 1940. Poems should be submitted in -typ­ ed form; but if this is not possible- then in neat pen and ink handwriting- on one side of the paper only. Three medals will be awarded by the Ontario ' Horticultural Associa­ tion, as follows: 1st. prize, Gold Med­ al; 2nd. prize, Silver Medal; 3rd. prize,.. Bronze Medal. - * • To stimulate interest in the Ontario Floral Emblem, the White Trillium, the Ontario Horticultural Association has announced a contest for poems on ■this beautiful wild flower. ■ <” ■ The contest will be open to pupils of Secondary Schools in Ontario, in­ cluding Private Secondary Schools. • Not more than.two poems may be entered from any school. * The poem, shall not exceed twenty- Dr. W. A. McKibben, B.A. PHYSICIAN AND .SURGEON Located at the Office of the Late Dr. H. W. Colbome. Office Phone 54 J. W. BUSHFIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money To Loan.1 Office — Meyer Block, Wingham J HARRY FRYFOGLE Licensed Embalmer and ’ Funeral Director Furniture and - Funeral Service Ambulance Service. Phones: Day 109W. Night 109J. f THOMAS FELLS . AUCTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD A Thorough Knowledge of Farm Stock. Phone 231, Wingham. ! By R. J. SCOTT Phone 19 Telephone 66 -2 T By WALLY BISHOP , J. H. CRAWFORD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.Make use of a shaded portion of the vegetable garden -by growing lettuce in it. Since lettuce does not stand -heat well, it will do better in that portion Bonds, Investments & Mortgages Wingham Ontario F. W. KEMP “ LISTOWEL Auction Sales Conducted. Monuments and Monumental Work. 100 Monuments to choose from. Phone: 38 or’121 - - Listowel How to “head-up” lettuce of the garden which is at least semi­ shaded. Transplanting is a first step toward "heading-up” lettuce. The soil into R. S. HETHERINGTON BARRISTER and SOLICITOR Office Morton Block. SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK - TA-TAM W.A. CRAWFORD, M.D. Physician and Surgeon . Located at the office of the late Dr. J. P. Kennedy. Phone 150 Wingham Consistent Advertising in The Advance-Times Gets Results DR. W. M. CONNELL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON LiVihq SgarjeCrjows Pft.O<EC< drtE. FIELD? in Ethiopia.,fplom con0an< menace OF BIRDS AND ROVlMq, BANDS oF BAJBOOKS J. ALVIN FOX Licensed Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS • THERAPY - RADIONIC > EQUIPMENT Hours by Appointment. Phone" 191 Wingham tfAVlAL, imUaBHIma river, INDIA,. A«AlMS 4REA<E.S< BULKoF An/ OF MODERN REPdlLES MUGGS AND; SKEETER Frederick A. Parker OSTEOPATH Offices: Centre St., Wingham and Main St., Listowel. Listowel Days: Tuesdays and Fri- . days. „ Osteopathic and Electric Treat­ ments. Foot Technique. Phone 272 Wingham A. R. & F. E. DUVAL CHIROPRACTORS CHIROPRACTIC and ELECTRO THERAPY North Street — Wingham Telephone 300.