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The Rural Voice, 1990-01, Page 38NEW: ' LICS UMiTED • Custom Cylinder building & repair including Truck Hoists, Fork Lifts, etc. • General Machining • Hydraulic Seals & Packing NEW—LIFT HYDRAULICS Limited Wallace Ave., N. Listowel 519-291-4413 HIGH MOISTURE SUPERCRETE HOG FEEDERS • 2', 3', 4', 5' and 6' lengths, handling wet or dry feed • 42" high single or double • 3' wearier feeders • Concrete pen sections • Supercrete hog troughs • Concrete manure chutes Inquire ` about our wet8dry % rotary '.•7 feeders Above: 4' long feeder Guaranteed for High Moisture Corn #11-1 Of Elp a Are'CP Cote COs FARM -o SOD UG STUBBE'S FARM PRODUCTS R.R. 2, Harley, Ontario NOE 1E0 Call Burgessville 519-424-2183 FARM SAFETY tJftt `'` j_r.T. facts from (c y 1 u' t ; � WEST WAWANOSH ,� f.�, i MUTUAL INSURANCE ii;;r .� , COMPANY '11;4..1_ ''. 4y' II -r Beware of CARBON MONOXIDE — THE SILENT KILLER. SAFETY TIPS: • Never leave a vehicle idling in a closed area. • Fuel -burning heaters should be vented adequately to the outdoors. • Burning charcoal or other combustibles in a closed area can lead to a buildup of carbon monoxide. • All fuel burning appliances should receive an annual safety inspection. When you need insurance call: Frank Foran. R.R. 2, Lucknow 528-3824 Lyons & Mulhern, 46 West St., Godench 524-2664 Kenneth B. MacLean, R.R. 2, Paisley 368-7537 John Nixon, R.R. 5, Brussels 887-9417 Donald R. Simpson, R.R. 3, Ripley 395-5362 Delmar Sproul. R.R. 3, Auburn 529-7273 Laurie Campbell, Brussels 887-9051 Slade Insurance Brokers Inc. Kincardine 396-9513, Pon Elgin 389-4341 Dungannon, Ont. NOM 1RO (519) 529-7922 36 THE RURAL VOICE RURAL LIVING Cranberries by Rhea Hamilton -Seeger Are all those Christmas cookies eaten up? Have you done all you can do to that huge turkey carcass gaping at you from the back of the fridge? Feeling guilty after all that holiday over -indulgence? Don't despair. While we may all at one time or another hate the sight of another shortbread, we all need to eat and maybe what we need is a rest from some of the fattening items. While at work one snowy day I overheard some co-workers wishing for a real blast of winter so they could stay home to relax and do some bak- ing. My mother instilled in me the same feeling. When you can't get out, make the most of it. Get the oven fired up and the flour bin out. I had a chat with Beth Wilkes, nutrition consultant for Huron County, about all the hubbub surrounding oat bran. Before you throw out all the wheat bran you've been using in muffins and sneaking into mcatloaf, consider that both oat and wheat bran are both important fibres. Each has its own job to do in the body. Wheat bran speeds up the digestion and helps your body rid itself of toxic substances quicker. Oat bran is a gum fibre which appears to help lower the body's cholesterol level. There are other types of fibre, such as the pectin fibre we get from fruits, and they also keep cholesterol levels down as well as helping to balance our blood glucose level. Wilkes notes that consumers should not abandon their familiar bran but, as always, try to eat a balanced diet with a bit of everything. Oatmeal is a whole grain which contains the best of everything, and on that satisfy- ing note here is a muffin recipe with the best of everything. That sounds like something a mother would say! Cranberry Yogurt Muffins 1 cup rolled oats 1 cup yogurt 1/2 cup vegetable oil 1/2 cup brown sugar 1 egg 1 cup all purpose flour