The Wingham Advance-Times, 1940-07-25, Page 6SBBSHSB
PAGE SIX WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES Thursday, July 25th, 194®
It Makes a Nicer Cool Drink
SALADA
Egg®TEA
Nut Bread
Coffee
Home-Made Bologna
lb. round Steak ground
lb. ham ground
cup
egg
tsp.
tsp.
tbsp, mustard, dry or prepared
Wife Preservers.
dry bread-crumbs
salt
pepper
%
%
1
1
H
1
Mix ingredients together and fill
salt bag. Tie up tightly. Boil in ket
tle If your blankets have shrunk and stiff
ened in a previous washing, and you want
to stretch them, you may find it helpful to
add glycerine to the warm suds in which
you wash them. You can use as much
glycerine as four or five tablespoons to
the gallon of water without harm. Rinse
in water the same temperature as suds,
and when blankets are nearly dry you
will find them much more pliable and eas
ier to stretch.
WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. To attempt
6.’ Young deer
11. Flame
12. Fetish
13. Nobleman
14. Divide into
equal parts
15. Small piece
16. Pig pen
17. Severe
21. Annex
24. Billiard
stick
25. School of
whales
28. Besides
31. A fancy
32. A region
33. Shining
brilliantly
37. Letter S'
38. Yes
39. Period of time
40. A fabric
42. Wooden
snowshoe.
44. Employ
47. Kind of rock
49. Daub
51. Made of oak
j 52. Swiftly
!i53, Next after
the second
154. Legends
DOWN
1. Warp-yam
X Thick slice
3. Hindu .
garment
4. Mercury'
(alchemy)
fc. Longing
C Exclamation
7. Disconcert
3. Decorative «
. coed
Fleet of ships
10. Pronoun
1& AIM (Ger.)
19. Regret
20. Indian
weight
21. Ablaze
22. City-bred
people
(Western
• U. S.)
23. Gown
25. Pierced
with horns
26. Sphere of
action
27. Pithy
29. Spigot
30.Insane
34. Rule
35. Sight organ Imia
36. Born
IuImIeIaIsEyMaIg u e|
centrate the under ripe fruit to make
it jell. Then of course, therp was al
ways the danger that the whole batch
of fruit and sugar would be waited
since there was no guarantee that the
work would produce the desired re
sults. Housekeepers of today have,
things pretty easy all around. They
can use fully ripe fruit when it is
cheapest and at its. flavour height.
Jams and jellies can be bottled in
about fifteen minutes from the time
the fruit is prepared now. Think of
the time left over for other summer
activities. Fuel saving, temper saving
and a yield of half .as much more as
used to be possible are the results of
the short-boil method. When the rules
are followed, there is no danger of a
failure — it has to be. a success.
Cherry Jelly is particularlydelicious
and useful. It is colorful, tangy, adds
glamour to. a cold meat salad plate
during the summer and is equally de
licious with hot meats later in
year.
Sour Cherry Jelly
3V2
7
1
To
about
not pit. Add ¥z cup water, bring to
a boil, cover, and simmer 10 minutes.
(For stronger cherry flavour, add %
teaspoon almond extract before pour
ing). Place fruit in jelly cloth o.r bag
and squeeze out juice. Measure sugar
and juice into large saucepan and mix.
Bring to a boil over hottest fire and
at once add fruit pectin stirring con
stantly. Then bring to a full rolling
boil and boil hard % minue. Remove
from fire, skim, pour quickly. Paraffin
and cover at once. Makes. about 10
glassed (6 fluid ounces each).
CUTS COSTS 3^^
f
cizdv
openinq
cannot
of hot water IVs hours.
Potato Salad
lb. bacon
tbsp, flour
Freshly boiled potatoes
tsp. salt
cup vinegar
cup water
bacon in small crosswise strips
Vs
1
tra-
Grand
to
By BETTY BARCLAY
40. Maker of
tiles ' 1
41. Short and
thick
42. Persian title
43. Japanese *
persimmon
45. Chair
46. Every one
47. Drunkard
48. Conclude
49. Short for
Samuel
50. Reserve
(abbr.)
.Distributed by Xing Featur** Syndicate. Im.
Io 2 3 4 &ft b 7 8 7 IO
II ft 12
13 ft
15 -
ft ft ft'16 ft
ft,ft 17 18 17 20 ft j j j ft ft
21 22 23 ft 2H ft 25 26 27
28 27 30
31 ft ft ft'32
33 3H 35 3b
37 38 37
ft HO Hi ft'ft ft
ft'H2 H3 ft ft ft<HH H£>H6
Hl
■>
H8 ft H7 50
il ft 52
■ ■ ■ ■ft'5H
1
%
1Z /2
Cut
and fry crisp. To 3 tablespoons bacon
fat add the flour. Blend. Add salt
and slowly add vinegar and water. Let
come to boil and pour over sliced,
freshly boiled potatoes and mix gent
ly, so as not to break the slices of po
tatoes. Serve hot.
Nut Bread
cups flour
level tsp. salt
tsp. baking powder
cup cornmeal
cups graham flour
cup molasses or water
cup brown sugar
cups milk
cup chopped walnut meats
flour, salt and taking powder,
add cornmeal and graham flour, mol
asses, brown sugar and milk. Mix
well and add nuts. Bake 1 hour in
350 deg. oven.
HOW TO PREPARE
BORDEAUX MIXTURE
ount of finely ground copper sulphate
gradually added. With the agitator
running, the fine powder will be thor
oughly dissolved in 5 minutes. In the
meantime the hydrated lime is placed
in a large pail and slowly stirred with
a stick while sufficient water is added
to fill the container. After thoroughly
mixing, the liquid is- then added grad
ually to the now dissolved copper sul
phate in the spray tank, while the en
gine and agitator continue to run. This
proceeding is repeated 2 or 3 times
until all the hydrated lime with tire
exception of the insoluble foreign
matter in the bottom of the pail, has
been carried over into the spray ma
chine.
Two pounds of calcium arsenate
are added, when the mixture is ready
to apply. Where small hand sprayers
are used, the method of preparing
Bordeaux mixture is exactly the same
except that the agitation of the liquid
in the sprayer will have to be done by
means of a flat stick in the absence
of an engine and mechanical agitator.
the
cups (1% lbs.) juice
cups (3 lbs.) sugar
bottle fruit pectin
prepare juice, -stem and crush
3 lbs. fully ripe cherries. Do
1/2 cup water, bring to
they will soon tak'e root.
VALUIREI BAKING POWDER
I Hints On
Fashions
.......................................... Illlltll
Propagating black raspberries
Early spring is the safest time
set out these “tip” plants. They
should not be planted deeply. The
“bdu” should not be placed below the
surface of the soil. Since these “tip”
plants are not planted deeply, it is
necessary that tliey be well firmed in
to the soil. Cut back the stems to six
inches after planting.
♦ * * ♦
Maple and elm seedlings have an
annoying habit of sprouting in flow
er beds and rock gardens. Pull them
up while they are young and before
they rob the plants of food and mois
ture.
Patched Pockets Placed Slantwise
WHETHER it’s short slacks "or
long slacks, play-suits or frocks, a
knockabout coat is still part and par
cel of the summer wardrobe. Girls
.seek coats that look well over frocks
or over sport things, and which they
.catl slip on over informal dinner
things.
Here’s a model that is going places
this summer. It is casual, yet it is
smartly Styled. The fabric is soft rab
bit’s hair and wool, the color a dull,
pale yellow. Darker yellow is used to
outline revers and tuxedo front, cut in
one. The patch pockets are placed
slantwise and are bordered with the
darker tone. The coat hangs straight
in front and has flaring fishtail full
ness in back.
Household
Hints
By MRS. MARY MORTON
iiiiiiiui iiiiniiiitiit nil iiiiiiiiiiiiiimil mil iiitimiiiiiiiummi
THIS IS another menu which is
practical for picnics, and also may
just as well be eaten in the home for
a dinner or supper. The bologna may
be served hot or sliced cold.
Today’s Menu
Homemade Bologna Potato'" Salad
Pickles Radishes
Fresh Fruit or Berries
Bordeaux mixture, although primar
ily a fungicide, is also used as a con
trol for many species of flea beetles
and some leaf hoppers. It is practi
cally always used as the basic liquid
when ispraying for the Colorado po
tato beetle since it is the standard re
medy for many important potato dis
eases. It is made by mixing copper
sulphate (bluestone), hydrated lime
arid water together in the following
proportions: copper sulphate (finely
ground) four pounds; hydrated lime,
six pounds, and water, 40 gallons.
The method is simplified greatly if
finely ground copper sulphate and hy
drated lime are used. After the spray
tank has been filled with water, the
engine is started and the correct am-
JELLY
WITHOUT TEARS
By Katharine Baker
Perfect jams and jellies are a
dition in some households,
mother handed down her recipes to,
mother and now daughter feels honor
bound to live up to the tradition. But
where grandmtoher, and perhaps mo
ther too, did it the hard way, the mod
ern woman can achieve traditional
perfection in jam and jelly making
without the labour that used to .be in
volved. Before modern short-boil me
thods were developed, long hours ov
er a hot stove were necessary to con-
U. S. Offers Lead
The United States1 offered- Latin
America its leadership and dollars at
the Havana, Cuba, Conference in a
bold fight against the totalitarian sys
tem of self-sufficient economy, and
called for joint trusteeship over any
European colonies in the Western
Hemisphere threatened with transfer
to any other European powers.
0RANP
If A LumP
OF SODIUM ME<A.U IS OK
FIREt rf COULD BE EXTINGUISHED
BY DOUSING WlYH KEROSENE.,
Bu< MO’T wrTH water/
-4i(ere.
HO KNOWN WAY
■4b -lELk.
KOW OLD
AH ADUKT
cF SAL<-
CorlAlX SOO,000,000
-tons —*
i MAY look
OLD. BUT .
_ LOOKS EDHT
couwC j
SCOH'S SCRAP BOOK
Bird ma/ be.
c*. IM cm *••• k*** *<* 1
By RJ, SCOTT
I
/
Business and Professional Directory
Surprisingly strong for a product
made of just coal, air and water,
the new nylon stockings demand a
very special kind of care. I have
found that nylon hosiery should be
given the same attention in laun
dering as the finest sheer silk.
Like most of you, I have always
been interested in the producers of
the things I wear and for that
reason I inquired at the American
Federation of Hosiery Workers in
Philadelphia about nylon and the
people who make these new stock
ings. Nylon hosiery, they say, is
available in every part of the
nation with the union label. That
little marker, you know, is a guar
antee that the stockings were made
under the best of working condi
tions and by skilled union crafts
men. These craftsmen tell us that
nylon should be washed in luke
warm suds with a mild pure soap
or flake.
Squeeze the suds through the
hosiery several times, remembering
that nylon has a quality of absorb
ing very little moisture and that
dirt and grime will be on the sur
face, only. Beware of rubbing.
With nylon you merely wash the
dirt off and not out.
Rinse once in lukewarm water
and once in a colder bath. Then
gently squeeze out the water, roll
in a dry bath towel for a few
minutes and hang up or spread out
evenly to dry. You’ll find your
stockings ready to wear, all smooth
and unwrinkled, in about a half
hour. This quick-drying quality is
amazing. Do not hang stockings
over a radiator or steam pipe. Do
not press with hot iron.
Women are finding that nylon is
not a substitute for silk stockings.
Both nylon and silk have definite
points and one supplements the
other. You’ll want nylon shades to
match your silk hosiery. Both types,
the union said, are made on the
same machines but at present
color ranges in nylon are limited.
Pending receipt of larger 'ship
ments of nylon stockings in your
favorite store you might check up
profitably on your supply of silk.
The hew spring lines in delightful
colors are available at all the shops
now, with the union label if you
are interested enough to ask. And
aren’t we all?
NOTHIN' DOIN’ II YOU’LL HAVE
It) RAISE THE ANTE ... I JUST
TURNED DOWN A DIME FROM
SISTER FOR THE SAME
JOB// 1
Wellington Mutual Fire
Insurance Co.
Established 1840.
Risks taken on all classes of insur
ance at reasonable rates.
Head Office, Toronto, Ont.
coSens & booth, Agents
Wingham.
Dr. W. A. McKibbon, B.A.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Located at the Office of the Late
Dr. H. W. Colbome.
Office Phone 54
•HARRY FRYFOGLE
Licensed Embalmer and
Funeral Director
Furniture and
Funeral Service
Ambulance Service.
Phones: Day 109W. Night 109J.
DR. R. L. STEWART
PHYSICIAN
Telephone 29
J. W. BUSHFIELD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Money To Loan.
Office — Meyer Block, Wingham
THOMAS FELLS
AUCTIONEER
REAL ESTATE SOLD
A Thorough Knowledge of Farm
Stock.
Phone 231, Wingham.
F. W. KEMP
LIST.0WEL
Auction Sales Conducted.
Monuments and Monumental work.
100 Monuments to choose from.
Phone: 38 or 121 . - - Listowel
J. H. CRAWFORD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Bonds, Investments & Mortgages
Wingham Ontario
Consistent Advertising
in
The. Advance-Times
Gets Results
DR. W. M. CONNELL
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phone 19
R. S. HETHERINGTON
BARRISTER and SOLICITOR
Office — Morton Block.
Telephone 66
J. ALVIN FOX
Licensed Drugless Practitioner
CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS
THERAPY - RADIONIC
EQUIPMENT
Hours by Appointment.
Phone 191 Wingham
W. A. CRAWFORD, MD.
Physician and Surgeon
Located at the office of the late
Dr. J. P. Kennedy.
Phone 150 Wingham
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 Winghain
A. R. & F. E. DUVAL
CHIROPRACTORS
CHIROPRACTIC and
ELECTRO THERAPY
North Street — Winghatn
Telephone 300. «
<?■
FMUGGS AND SKEETER
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiti iiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiilin*.
By WALLY BISHOP,
MM
I Garden -Graph
| By DEAN HALLIDAY
J....... ........................................ .......
Black and purple raspberries have
biennial stems. This means the stems
grow out from a perennial root the
first year. The second year they bear
fruit, after which they die.
These bushes are easily propagated
however, by “tiplayering,” as shown
in the accompanying Garden-Graph.
Itt July or August, cover the ends of
new stem with soil, as illustrated, and
0
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