The Wingham Advance-Times, 1952-04-02, Page 10Radios & Washers
REPAIRED
GUARANTEED
SERVICE
lin APPLIANCES
E. SEDDON
PHONE 505 WINGHAM
41110111.1q11111.
WANTED
HORSES FOR SLAUGHTER
3c LB. AT FARM.
DEAD and DISABLED HORSES
and COWS up to $5.00 each.
Smaller animals according to size
and condition.
C. BRUBACHER
Phone 608w1 R.R. 1, Wingham
Hello Homemakers! People who
have reached the age of recollection
are often amazed to find that un-
important moments in their lives
have been the happiest. Uncommon
events, however gratifying, are
without stress and strain; happy
times will always seem like "spring."
Remembrances that speak affec-
tion and consideration in mute ways
are memories of home. swept, dust-
ed and arranged to suit the family.
Today we strive to make a house a
home.
Te
"S L
s
GRASS SEED
No. 1 Canadian Alfalfa per bushel $48.00
No. I Seed Alfalfa Mixed Original stand
10% Red Clover per bushel $31.00
No. I Red Clover per bushel $24.50
No. 1 Mamrnoth_Clover per bushel $24.50
No. 1 Alsike per bushel $37.00
Long Term Pasture Mixture, 24 lb. bag (sows 1 acre) . . $12.95
No. 1 Yellow Blossom Sweet Clover per bushel $10.00
No. 1 Timothy per bushel $ 9.00
No. 2 Timothy per bushel $ 8.00
No. 1 Birdsfoot Trefoil per lb. 75c
No. 1 White Dutch Clover
per lb. $1.75 No. 1 Ladino
per lb. 95c
No. 1 Orchard Grass per lb. 35c
No. 1 Brome Grass per lb. 35c
" WE SELL THE SEED THAT GROWS"
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GREATEST PAINT VALUE IN YEA :"S
REGAL FINIS ES
QUICK-DRYING PORCH & FLOOR SATIN FINISH
ENAMEL
ENAMEL HOUSE PAINT
Top Quality - Bottom Prke$ 1.00 a qt.
4 ft. Step Ladder .$1.49
5 ft. Step Ladder $5.50
6 ft. Step Ladder $6.95
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1 lb. Hawes Floor Wax 47c
Pt. Aerowax, no rubbing 40c
Qt. Aerowax, no rubbing 55c
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Whitewash Lime 50 lb. bag 75c
Whitewash Brushes 69c
Thermos Bottles 79c
Special Blue Tea Kettle
Reg'. $2.35 Sale Price $1.59
BULBS - 100-watt inside
frosted 18c 2 for 35c
CORN BROOM for only $1.00
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Sunworthy Wallpaper -
Room-Lots at 1/2 PRICE
Boys' Metal Wagons ..$3.00 & $5.45
Air Flow Boys' Wagons
equipped with Hi-Speed
Roller Bearings ... . $9.95 & $10.95
Boys' Wagons with. Racks
equipped with Hi-Speed
Roller Bearings ... $14.25 & $16.95
45 lb. Roll Roofing
per roll $3.25
55 lb. Roll Roofing
per roll $4.20
1 Gal. Roof Coating
89c
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DUROLAVE FLAT OIL BOND WATER 'PAINT Reg. $1.69 for 75c
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NEW & USED APPLIANCES
1 Used Easy Washer ....$69.00
1 Used Thor Washer ....$59.00
New Easy Washers ... .4129.00
McClary Propane Gas Stove
. $149.00
7 cu. ft. Monach Refrig. $229.00
Beatty Gas Washer
new price $225.00, used
very little. Sale Price $125.00-
STAINTON HARDWARE
AND
FARMERS SUPPLY HOUSE-
PHONE ;0 WINGHAM
CERTIFIED PAINTS Imo
LtASI DE na,o.w CANADA
32" Circular Saw
$20.95
Canadian Cement
per bag
$1.15
Fanning Mill Screen
' 25c sq. ft,,
SOLID COPPER
8 Qt. TEA KETTLE
$5.19 Value
Reduced to $3.50
THE WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES PAON TEN
However, if you are tired from,
overwork, the household chores will
not be acemoplished as readily, as
easily, or as well. So let's take heed:
I. Alternate sitting down tasks and
standing up tasks. Don't be
on your feet too long at one time,
2. Wear properly fitted shoes and
comfortable clothes while working
around the house.
3. Notice humorous and interesting
incidents to relate at mealtimes.
Take a walk or do some reading
or pay your neighbor a short visit.
4. Do head work while dusting,
sweeping, washing dishes and
such, You can plan family recre-
ation, the garden needs or birth-
day parties.
5. Keep all cleaning supplies and
equipment in a basket and 'carry
from room to room while cleaning.
6. Before washing the breakfa1t
dishes, do any necessary baking
or advance meal preparations,
then wash all at once.
7, Right after using, fill cooking
pans with hot water. An exception
to this rule are egg, cereal and
milk dishes which are soaked in
cold water.
8, To prepare boiled potatoes, scrub
them, peel a strip around each
one, then boil 20 minutes. The skin
is quickly removed.
9. Use a piece of aluminum foil on
cookie sheet and broiling pan to
save unnecessary washing of these
pans,
10. Do messy jobs on paper to be
disposed of easily. Such tasks are
cleaning silver, peeling potatoes or
apples, grating vegetables, making
sandwiches and many others,
11. Clean the grater after making
crumbled cheese or minced onion
by rubbing With a hard crust of
bread,
12. Make a mark on the coffee pot
and measuring cup to show the
correct amount usually prepared
for the family. We use nail polish
for a marker. Then coffee is more
quickly prepared.
THE QUESTION BOX
Mrs. E. Mc. asks: Can we place a
silver entree containing broccoli and
sprinkled with cheese under a hot
broiler?
Answer No. Never subject silver
plated ware or sterling to direct
heat. Broil cheese on broccoli on a
piece of aluminum soil then slide
gently into a silver entree which has
been rinsed. with hot water.
Mrs. X. R, asks; Have you a pew
idea for a special but easy lunch?
Answer; If you wish a delectable
luncheon treat prepare one three-
decker sandwich for each person.
Make plain ham sandwiches then
lay a thin slice of loaf cheese on top
of each and place a slice of canned
pineapple over this with a •Spoonful
of mint jelly in the centre. Now the
decker sandwiches are slipped onto
the broiling pan and under the pre-
heated top oven element. Allow a
distance of 3 inches between the top
Of the sandwich and the electric ele-
ment, and 3 to 4 minute toasting
period. Serve on a tea plate garnish-
ed with parsley and olives. (Remem-
ber this will be eaten with a knife
and fork.) A fruit cup, sugar cook-
ies, and coffee will complete a won-
derful luncheon,
THE SUGGESTION BOX
Mrs. .1. C, says; I use a smart
shoe box with the corners reinforced
with cellulose tape for a recipe file.
In it I keep a small pair of scissors
and a bottle of glue and a package
of 3x4 inch cards, and a recipe in-
dex. As soon as I clip out a recipe
it's pasted on a card and filed.
Mrs. E. D. says: Banana Rolls
are a favourite dessert at our house.
Use a half banana (cut crosswise)
and roll it in a square of pastry
sprinkled with a little grated cheese,
Tuck in the ends and bake, folded
side down, in a hot electric oven of
400 degrees for 20 minutes. Serve
warm with a tart lemon sauce,
Mrs. H. T. says. Often the simplest
recipes are best, Here is a good sup-
per dish. Add 34 cup grated cheese
to 2 cups white sauce and stir until
melted. Season with salt and pepper.
Arrange cubes of canned corned
beef and a half tin of (drained)
mushroom pieces in a greased casse-
role. Pour over hot cheese sauce I
and sprinkle with l2 cup dry !
crumbs. Bake in a moderate electric
oven of 425 degs. for 12 minutes,
FARM PRICES LEAD
THE WAY DOWN
Prices are beginning to come down;
and, as is usual at sue!'i times, farm
prices are in the lead. This may not !
seem fair to the farmers whose Prices
were the last to go up. But if prices
are ever to return to reality they will
have to begin somewhere.
All things considered, it is better
for the farmer to take the rap when
it comes and get it over with than to
continue the present distortion 1.(11
trade becomes no longer possible. i
It should not be forgotten that the!
increase in the world's population
since the beginning of the industrial ,
revolution has been, due to increased
productive capacity and the compara-
tive freedom to exchange products
throughout the world.
Today the world has this increased
population to feed, clothe and house;
hilt the production facilities and the
exchange opportunities are sadly out
of order, Until these can be restored
a large part of the world's population
is hound to go hungry.
The trend among agriculturists to-
day Is to seek monopolistic control of
the marketing of their products in
order to maintain, or increase their
prices,
This is a mistaken policy. If suc-
cessful it could result in increased
scarcity of badly needed food, This
in turn would brand the farmers as
public enemies and could easily lead
to a demand that their industry be
socialized. The human race will not
allow the land on which it depends for
its food. to remain in the hands of a
class of people whose aim is to create
scarcity In order to make food dear.
It is a fact that the farmers of
this North American continent are
materially better off than they were
before the war, which is more. than
can be said of the people of almost
any other part of the earth.
Our farm organizations should ap-
preciate this And direct their efforts
toward getting all other prices down
rather than trying to maintain the
present unoredecented prices of Calm
products.
THE RURAL SCENE
•
Change is the Law of all Things
Seven out of ten people have defective vision-
though many of them do not know it. Our eyes
change year by year; if your vision was normal
a year ago, it may not be today. Be wise, then!
Have your eyes examined at least once a year.
The time to begin is right now.
W. R. HAMILTON, OPTOMETRIST
"A Complete Visual Analysis"
ISM- UV WELL
t(
Electricity, properly used, brings modern service and
convenience to your fingertips. It adds to the ease and
enjoyment of living, it places a host of "electrical servants"
at your beck and call twenty-four hours of the day. But
the extent to which you can use these electrical servants
depends upon how wisely your home is wired.
Inadequate wiring is inefficient . . even dangerous.
Adequate wiring lets you operate your lighting and appli-
ances at peak efficiency at alltimes. What is adequate
wiring? Briefly, it means the 'correct size of three wire
service to the house, the proper number of circuits and
correct size of wire within the home, together with sufficient
outlets in each room to take care of your electrical require.
ments both today and in the future.
Thanks to "power at cost" you can economi.
cally use all these electrical servants in your
home-if you haveprovided for them. Be
sure, whether you plan to build or remodel,
that adequate wiring has top priority on your
check list of things you need. We will be
glad to help you solve your wiring problems.
Wingham
Utilities Commission
THE FUSE
When too 'mat
a load is placed
on a circuit, or
when a "short"
occurs, the fuse
"burns our" and cuts off
the Power. This is your
protection, BE SURE
TO REPLACE A rust
WITH THE CORRECT sizst,
WAPNV$0104 APIRIT4
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