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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1943-04-08, Page 6rget, working daughter plenty of Weilsonis the Chocolate Cocoa • Mother—whether she is in a factory; store or office; see that she gets at least one steaming hot cup of Neilson's Cocoa every days For true nutrition you can't do betters She likes Neilson's Jersey Milk Chocolate; so she Is sure to enloy Neilson's, the Chocolate Cocoas NEILSON'S DELICIOUS COCOA BEVERAGE For each cup required, mix dry: 1 tsp. cocoa, 1 tsp. sonar. 5*' Into a smooth pasts with a little told milk. Fill cup with hot milk. Owing constantly. 101151016 COCOA Thursday, April 8th”. 1943 - PAOLI' SIX WINGTIAM ADVANCE-VME$ uality counts rich, satisfyin only a fine quality IF DIE MIXING BOWL sp Am* ARAM ' Mria Mass. Ibmomage CHEDDAR CHEESE—FLAVOUR- FUL AND NUTRITIOUS Hello Homemakers! For centuries the nomadic tribes of Asia and Africa made different kinds of cheese tut it was an enterprising English farmer in the village of Cheddar, near Bristol, who systematized the former crude method of processing. Cheese made according tb his method is called Cheddar and has become the model of cheeseniaking the world over. In , Canada, Cheddar cheese is both plentiful and cheap, and for quality — did you know that the cheese- makers of Ontario have won many prizes for their products? There's high nutrition value, too, in cheese: it is made from milk - that wonderful food. A quantity (% lb.) supplies % of the-calories needed per day by the average adult. It's a grand meat sub- stitute and, being a cooked product, it requires only a small amount of electricity to blend flavours together — both important factors to-clay. peas, baked potatoes, cottage pudding (electric oven), RECIPES Cheese Ring 4 eggs slightly beaten, 1 cup milk, 21A tbs, melted butter, 1/2. cup grated cheese, i/2 tsp, salt, - tsp. pepper, few grains cayen- ne, few drops onion juice. Combine ingredients in order given. Turn into buttered ring mold or tim- bale molds, set in pan of hot water, and ;bake until brown in slow electric even (325°). Turn onto hot serving dish and fill centre with creamed peas. Serves 4. Luncheon Cheese Dish 2 eggs slightly beaten, 1 cup thin cream, 1 tbs. butter, 1 tsp, salt, 14 tsp. mustard, % tsp, paprika, few grains cayenne, 14 lb, mild cheese cut in small pieces, stale bread cut in finger- shaped pieces 1/s inch thick. Spread bread with butter. Arrange close together around sides' of butter- ed baking dish, having bread extend about 1 inch above dish; also line bot- tom of dish. Combine other ingred- ients, pour into dish, and bake 30 minutes in electric oven (350°). Serves 4., Cottage Pudding (Requested) 14 cup baking fat, % cup sugar, 1 egg beaten, 1 cup milk, 21%4 cups flour, 4 tsps. baking powder, Vs tsp. salt, Cream fat; mix in sugar gradually, beat in egg. Sift flour, measure and add 'baking powder and salt. Acid al- ternately with milk to first mixture. Pour into cake pan or muffin tins. Bake in electric oven at 375°. Serve with left-over fruit or pudding sauce. Washable Wallpaper with soap and water and it turned very brown. What should I have used?" Answer: A cloth wrung dry, out of lukewarm suds. Water softeners, harsh soaps, alkalis and hot water must be avoided. Mrs. J. M, asks; "Recipe for a cake called `Burnt Leather'?" Stunt Leather Cake cup brown sugar, 14 cup boiling water, x2 cup baking fat, 1 cup white sugar, 2 cups house- hold flour, 2 eggs, 3 tsps, baking powder, 1 tsp, vanilla, 1 cup cold water, Syrup — Heat brown sugar in pan over fire until dark brown; then add boiling water. Method; Cream fat, add sugar and beaten egg yolks; cream well. Sift flour wiith baking powder and add, alternately with water, to fat mixture, Add syrup (there should be about 5 tbs.) and vanilla. Lastly, add stiffly beaten egg whites. Bake in layer cake tins in electric oven of 350° for 20 minutes, * * $ Anne Allan invites you to write to If Your Child Catches Cold Listen- -listen to millions of experienced mothers and relieve miseries with the IMPROVED Vicks treatment that takes only 3 minutes and makes good old Vicks VapoRub give BETTER THAN EVER RESULTS! IT ACTS 2 WAYS AT ONCE to bring relief. WAYS AT ONCE her c/o The Advance-Times, Send in your questions on homemaking prOblems and watch this column for replies. !pow! o ! l lh, R it ll .1,,,, "1U Household I E 3 11 By MRS. MARY MORTON ;in •40J. Whether the homemaker is alone at luncheon time or whether she gets a meal for several healthy children, she should take time out from her numer- ous duties to eat a good nourishing meal, although it may not be as hearty as a dinner. Sandwiches are a good bet, followed by fruit or salad and maybe a sweet like a cookie, and milk or tea to drink. Today's Menu Breakfast Fruit or Fruit Juice Cereal with Top Milk or Eggs, Scrambled or Poached Coffee or Cocoa Toast or ;Muffins Luncheon Cream Cheese, Nut and jelly Sandwiches Celery Cookies Milk or Tea Dinner Pot Roast Buttered Carrots Mashed Potatoes Gravy Mixed Vegetable Salad Apple Meringue Pie " Tea or Coffee Cream Cheese, Nut and Jelly Sandwiches 12 slices 'bread Butter Cream cheese Sliced nuts Lettuce Jelly Do not trim crusts from bread, or if you do, be sure to save them and put them to good use so there is no waste. Spread alternate slices with butter and cream cheese, then on top of each slice that is spread wrp cheese sprinkle nuts liberally, dot With jelly, cover with lettuce leaf and with slice of buttered bread. Cut into neat pieces and serve. Apple Meringue Pie Baked pie shell 4 to 5 medium sized apples 'A c. water 1/2 c. sugar 1/2 tsp. grated lemon rind 2 tbsps. butter 2 eggs c; additional sugar Cut apples into small pieces, core but do not peel. Cook with water until soft, then force through strainer. Put into top part of double boiler, add sugar, lemon rind, fat and beaten egg yolks and cook over hot water until thickened. Remove from heat and cool, then Olin into prepared shell. Make meringue by beating egg whites stiff with a dash of salt, add second amount of sugar gradually, beating it in as added, and spread over filling. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until firm and nicely browned, about 15 minutes. Hints On Fashions Bows bow in as a most popular trimmings and appear on everything from bags to coats. A set of lingerie striped ribbon bows will do wonders for dressing tip simple or basic dress es, This neat and useful navy crepe daytime dress owes mach to the perky bows that are used on the bodice and hold the skirt drapetY, The bows are of red and white checked taffeta rib- bon. Aid. For Estimating Sugar Needs For Canning Your Sugar Requirements Vor Can- ning Must Be Made By April 16 It Is believed the following info- Illation will be of considerable value to botiSOWIVes Who must fill 'glair ap, pliqtion blanks for canning sugar (found in,their new Ration Book) and hand in to the Local Ration Board not later than April 15th. Here are the average \weights of fruits per basket: 'Strawberries: Quart: 20 oz. Raspberries: Quart:'22 oz. Cherries: 6 qt. basket, 7 1/2 lbs; 1 qt. basket, 16 lbs. Currants, black: 6 qt. basket, 8 lbs. Red, 6 qt. basket, 7 lbs. Plums: 6 qt, ;basket, 8 lbs; 11 qt. basket, 16 lbs. Pears: bushel, 50 lbs.; 6 qt. basket, 8 lbs; 11 qt. basket, 16 lbs. Peaches: bushel, 45 -lbs.; 6 qt. bas- ket, flat," 8 lbs.; heaped, 12 lbs.; 11 qt. basket, flat, 16 lbs. Grapes: 6 qt. basket, 7% lbs.; 11 qt, basket, 14 lbs. Apples: Barrel, loose 130 lbs.; bus- 44 lbs.; 6 qt, basket, 8 lbs. Goderich Pastor Called Rev. A. J, Milligan, for the past three and a half years pastor of ';Gode- rich Baptist Church, has been called up for chaplaincy service in the Can- adian Army and will report to Lon: don on April 12. He is to be stationed at Kingston. He •is a McMaster Uni- versity graduate and came' here front Sherbrooke, Que, KNOW THE ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS ABOUT ,FARM DAIRY BUTTER Farmers who make dairy butter often .come to the grocer witih ques- tions about rationing. It is handy for food dealers to know the answers. Here are some of them: 1. Farmer: Must I stick to the ration allowance or may my own household use as much as they need of the butter we make on the farm? Grocer: They' may use as much as they need. 2, Farmer: Then can I also buy but- ter with the butter coupons in our ration ;books? Grocer: Only if you Ilse less of your own butter than\the ration allowance of half a pound of butter per con- poll, Then you may make up the difference by buying with your cou- pons. 3, Fanner: But that would leave about two-thirds of my cottpOns unused, What do I do with them? Grocer: You send them to the local ration ;board. 4, Farmer And if I use my own but, ter entirely and do not buy any, must I send all the butter coupons to the local ration board? Orocerl Yes: The official statement of the Ration Administratioin is as follows; "Producers of dairy ibutter are not rationed in respect of the butter pro- duced by them and consumed in their household, Producers of dairy butter must not use their coupons to acquire butter' except to the extent that the AMOUfit of butter produced by them and consumed hi their household is * * * * NUTRI-THRIFT MENU Breakfast:, Orange juice, cooked cereal with wheat germ and milk, French toast, coffee. Dinner: Potatoes (to be mashed) and steamed ciscoes — on one ele- ment — coddled apples and tomatoes (heated) — on one element. Supper: Cheese ring with creamed most that g flavour which tea yields, use. AD Gives you 2 lbs. EXTRA Gives you handy, Built-in Pouring Spout JOIN the thousands of happy housewives who have discovered the extra economy and extra convenience of Robin. Hood Oats New Giant Economy package with the bandy, Built-in Pouring Spout. Here in this compact, five-pound package —2 lbs: Extra — you get those fine tasty Robin Hood Oats with the distinctive Pan- Dried flavour. For Robin Hood captures and holds the rich natural flavour of choice-quality Western Canadian Oats and heightens that flavour to unexcelled peaks of toasty goodness by their own Pan- Drying process. Give your family a brand new breakfast sensation tomorrow morning. Serve steam- ing bowls of famous, delicious Robin Hood Oats and watch the family come into break- fast "on the double". Robin Hood Oats contain 72 International units of Vitamin B-1 in every ounce and contain useful amounts of Proteins and Minerals too. Get your Oats in the Giant new Robin Hood package and .you buy nothing but oats and a convenient, inexpensive but sturdy paper package. You get two pounds EXTRA oats of unexcelled quality. The handy Built-in Pouring Spout on top of the Economy Package is a great conven- ience, for "Presto".—it's ready to pour and "snap" the bag is closed against dirt, air and moisture. Next time you get oats, ask your grocer for Robin Hood Oats in the Giant, New Economy Package, Everyone who tries them —likes them, so will youl over A. C. Adams . Wingham Dominion Stores Ltd. Wingham• 8, F. McCkee . Wingham * * * * THE QUESTION BOX Mrs. C. D. says: "Tried cleaning cloth. Try itl The Improved Way CO I 4.1).PENETRATES to upper / breathing passages with soothing me- w dicinal vapors. STIMULATES chest and backt ro if as c :Es itk5e: warming poultice. • WORKS FOR HOURS to ease coughs, relieve muscular soreness or tightness, and bringreal, honest-to-goodnesscomfort. To get this improved treatment . . . just massage VapoRub for 3 minutes ON BACK as well as throat and chest, For Better Results then spread thick layer on chest and ICKS V cover with warmed Varna:tins Mundy's . Wingham Smith's Economy Food Store . Wingham T. B. Johnston . Belgium Hints Robin Mood Flour Mills Limited BUY ROBIN HOOD OATS IN THE GIANT PACKAGE AT THESE STORES: C. H. Wade , F. J, 1-lollyrnan I.J.:Pow'ell . ;;;. rt • .e.giraVe • . Blyth Blyth 'less than the total legal ration of the family. In other words, if the ration is eight ounces and ;the farmer pro- duces dairy butter at the rate of four ounces per person in his family, half of the household's coupons may be used outside, the ,other half must be surrendered to the Local Ration Board. However, if the farmer's• production is at the rate of twelve ounce's per person, he may consume. all of it, but in that case, he must surrender all of the coupons."'" HERE'S WHAT TO DO I You can take your fat drip- pings, scrap fat and bones to your meat dealer. He will pay you the establishedd. prihe ce for the dripping an t scrap fat. if you Wish, er te you chn thia nioney ov your turn local Voluntary Salvage Committeeorchatity, or Boor_gistereaLooal War 'Lou can donate your fat drip, 2 ping, scrap Jai and bones to your local voluntary Salvage Committee it they collect them in your community, or'""' , . your Fats and Bones for cola You can continue to ple das leetion by your Street Cle ucanh . iangtvolDieenipairtibtinelwolitere s "PAIM %Vet :Lttit ttigidl eat ,emu