The Huron Expositor, 1944-01-07, Page 6gamntoonnowamanismont
444444444444'4441‘4i144. •
7'n
•
Aomonnascranenws,:aingtaann.......nansoan,
ALLAN
'14rilre Hama Iteaoisilst
Hello flomegtakers! Do you know
• that more people in Canada feasted
,
OA the food- •thart they were able to
purOmee ter themselves- this season,
• • Ole the' fact that their earnings
were 'numb greater. Large quantities
See uf-fOod'Peoducts are still in great de-
mand but in -short supply. This calls
for intensive and •comprehensive edu-
,
• cation' on the proper use of food.
The Iamb:lion Government is
• •-r z
launching a second nutrition cam-
e
paign, stressing the conservation of
food, during this coming month. The
Mixing Bowl "Colunins will include
authentic information and more- econ-
,• Omical recipes to assist in this pro'
grain. It is then up to each...and ev-
.
• • ' ery one .to ehaee and play square
with food.
Food is fighting for freedoni every-
wbere: in the Army field kitchens
where meals are cooked within sound
• of battle; on ships, cooking goes on
as guns roar defiance at enemy dive
• bombers. Food is fighting in the lib-
,
.,• .
seated countries where there is white
bread on the table 'for the first Aisle
in years and food fights at home.
eda has produced more food tine
, previous years, but the
nee.ioawar, and of the peace which
will fizilow,• impose ever-facreas-
ing demands 111)011 our national lar-
der.
Co-operation on the home front
will mean four things: It means pro -
clueing food, conserving food, sharing
food and playing square with food.
The homemakers of Canada .will
a.ssurne. a great deal of the responsi-
bility along •these lines. During the
past year, women took the place of
on• the farms and became en-
thusiastic victory • gardehers. This
year there *ill be more exacting de-
mands on the kitohen shelf and Oan-
ada's national larder. We will have
to consider methods of: 1. Produc-
ing still more food. 2. Conserving
food, by careful marketing. 3. Pre-
serving food intelligently. 4. Plan-
140,7410.004
.v4o.at4014„.t9o48:-;
AoA4to.. otta* A.4040`4 Xiene ,
Shiite leVallable • suprleits,-rt Y
a1RFgoltreelifeew sYltbs.tsbet
Ferees, the 'PeoPheof'0)".•e.* ,Britella.
poati. fellow aations. If wilfaletty only'
whet We needs We, S'Isillabe,3taking
big step in the -right-tire:44m;
Hand in hand with ebari4 the food
is the 'need for playing square with
food and that means living up to the
pride -and retaining „esegulations cheer-
fully and w111iaiy.'A few incon.veni-
9nces or changes iii our food habits
are not a great sacrifice to make in
helping to 'win this war.
* roe *
' TAKE 'A TIP;
1. Provide a closed box near 'your,
'doorstep if,4]j sun shines- on' the
Place where the bottle 'ofalialk is left.
Don't sthink that :sunshine, just. be-
cause it's good- for man and 'beast,
is good fel: milk too. H is highly de-
structive of •Ribeflavin (b2), a valu-
able zn4ritive element in milk.
2. Peel potatoes and fruits just be-
fore you_ cook and serve theirs Vita-
min C is lost when prepared' raw
fonds are left in a' warm 'MOM: '
3. Do use water in which vege-
tables have 'been cooked to make
soups, sauces, gravies and stews. Vit-
amin B1 dissoivei: in water and is
Ready -Made Menus fir21
YOURS
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• Tempting ... Convenient .
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-I- the timely menus in "Eat -to -Work -to -
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taking planning for you. And it's yours FREE.
Never was it more important that you pro-
vide proper food for your family. For good
nutrition is vital to Victory now—to health and
happiness after the war. Yet recent Govern-
ment statistics show that only 40 percent of
Canadians regularly eat the right foods, even
• though seemingly well fed.
Learn the"can't-go-wrone way to tempting
•
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ays
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'NUTRITION FOR VICTORY;
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, -
• REOIPES
..;
Barbectied Beef Loaves
Melptested)
1 ,strip bacon
pciiind ground beef
1/4 pound ground lean pork
1 tablespoon chopped onion
1/4 cup dry bread crumbs (fine)
1/3 cup
1 teaspoon salt.
Cut .Strip of bacon fine and Mix
with bread 'crumbs, milk and salt.
Add meats and onion, and. blend well.
Shape into `four (individual oblong
meat 'caved and place -in. shallow oil-
• ;,
'Everysday, before- the 'Opexting
Britain's Parliarneat„ a crowd gethere
in the central lebby outeld.e ethe
Chamber of the lieltee OCemnitass.
Policemen keep a *Wage clear
through the orowd. The pritteipal'Po-
lice officer • calls oat: "Hats ofg,
strangers," and a small procession
passes by. Feat oomes the Sergeant -
et -Arms, generally a retired naval, or
army 'officer of distinction, ' carrying
the mace. Then ''oonees the Speaker,
in white wig, black knee breeches and
Jong black Then come the
Chalilatie and the Speaker's secretary.
Af, the Speaker passes, every Mem-
ber of Parliament bows.
To tae visitor the, procession. -may
seem foolish or out-of-date; to every
Member of Parliament it lea matter
of pride. To the visitor th•e mace, may
seem a meaningless but handsome
ornament, which looks as though it
were made of gold but is, in feet,
made of eilver; to every Member of
PartienSeet it is a symbol of ),the pow-
er •of the Hbuse Of -Commons. .The
shaft of the present Mame is said to
be over three hundred years old, and
to have been part of the original,
mace which Cromwell ordered his sol-
diers to remove when he • broke into
Parliament in 1653.
. "What shall we do with this 'bau-
ble?" he said; but nearly three hun-
dred years.later, the mace still rests
on its stand on, the great table in the
centre of the Chamber.
In 1242 King .Henry 111 of England
opened Parliament, and his epek,es-
mea demanded financial aid for :his
war with France. The reply was Un-
favorable. ' For the firet, time the peo-
ple were epposing the right of the
King to levy taxes •asehe Edward I had
tb agree tbatainoney .should only be
raised "by coon aesent of the
realm; .and for the common profit
thereof:- The common people, ,as
well as the -aristocracy and the. cler-
gy, were thus given a share in the
'government Of Britain.
'SlowlY, throughout the centuries,
these elected representatives of the
People have gained in power, and it
is now the House of Commons that
has the right .of imposing taxesand
deciding how the money shall be
spent. Even newpaper articles which
were considered attacks on ,the dig-
rty of Parliament have brought -their
writers to prison, and as 'far back as
1095 it was resolved that the -offer of
any kind of bribe to a Member of
Parliainent-or his 'acceptance of one
was "a high crime and misdemean-
or."
Only a few weeks ago, during the
last parliamentary session, one mem-
ber reported that he had received a
cheque for £5 to cover his expenses
to attend some meeting, and the of-
ferer of the cheque had to make a
humble apology; he was deemed to
have insulted not only this one,mem-
berS but the whole House .
Since the sixteenth centary, mem-
bers have. in theory been immune
,frdm arrest, and there have been cas-
es when city, officers Who refused to
release ta member so arrested swere
themselves imprisoned. This does not
mean that member a can contract
debts or eernmit other _crimes with-
out punishment, but it does mean
that no action may be taken against
them without the consent of the
Speaker, he President of the Chem -
At all costs, freedom of speech
be maintained.
ed pan.
'Make Barbebae-Sauce by heating
together one-third cup catsup, 1 table-
spoon -vinegar, 1/2 tablespoon "Wor-
,cestershire sauce, 1/4 teaspoon chili
:powdereand 1.• tablespoon chopped s on-
ion. Pour over the meat loaves and
bake 45 minutes At 350 degrees F.,
basting one or twice. Serves astir.
Stewed Heart With Rice
(Requested)
1 beef heart (about 3 lbs.)
2 tablespoons cubed onion.
2 tablespocins cubed: carrots
stalk celery
2- tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons shortening. .1
eS teaspoon 'salt
1 tablespoon vinegar.
Wash heart_ and remove all veins
and tough fibres. Cut in small piec-
es and cover with water for 15 min-.
etes. Drain and add boiling water to
cover. Add cut carrot, onion and
celery. Simmer gently for 3 to four
hours. Mix flour and melted butter
and stir into the hot stew. Add the
vinegar end :stir until thickened.
Serve with a border of steamed rice.
Sprinkle with chopped, parsley. Serv-
ings: 6. - -
StO:k-T4king
Afry Business Man, when pm are taking stock with the
conling of the new pear, whp not check pbUrrequirentents of
• t' -',V,"'.""
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EXPOSITOR
lAt ENTING DEPARTMENT
r. )1641. Seaforth
Anne Allan invites you to write to
her c/o The Huron Expositor. Send
in your suggestions on homemaking
problems and -watch this column for
replies.
The R.A.F. in Russia
(From
In the course ,of a• programmeeirt
.honor of Russia's National Day,' Plight
' Lieutenant Hubert Griffith said: "I
had the to be there, in Russia,
as administrative officer - Wing Ad-
jutant - with the chaps of the Fight-
er Wing of English Huiricanes that
went out to Murmansk in the elate
summer of 1941. We. were the first
English contingent in the first
few weeks an4asetenths of Russia be-
coming our ally. We saw -in full
measure -Russia atewar. We lived
and worked on an Arctic airdrome
with our Soviet opposite numbers -
pilots, ground crews, senior offiders,
administrative personnel.:- eaoh to
each. We got to know them through
and through, and believed in them
and trusted them, and liked them;
and they got to know us, in these
• months, and they got to believe in us,
• and 'trust tie -and I sincerely think,
• toelike as too.
- "The Russians have a passionate
en•bhuslasm. for aviation. They would
fly in any weather. And they worked
•airsaeisseittreine enthusiasm for the
British game of darts once we had
taught It them. They would throw
• the dart as though it were a harpoon
and the dart -board the body of a Ger-
man-
"I wish I could give you an idea
of the tremendous sense of 'urgency'
in wartime Russia. It impresied us,
and shook us, and left something nev-
er to bes forgotten in the memory.
The Russian pilote gave our own -pil-
ots a series of parties, and nerve -
shaking parties they were .. ... -Our own
pilots gave the Russian •pilots also
•-some parties -and these were not bad
parties either. And our senses of to that of defender of the rights of
'humer-British and Russian turned' the House 'of Commons, if necesearY
out curiously the saratr We had' in-' even 'against the King himself.' No
the
Listener)
king .cktkox1e4 oo!ciefL 04 '41# #04440:i
the Weliallt of of Clains, that he ruled , •• •
by ,dirifse right and net itlY consent 'of the Seater YOutt name you aim
the peeple and their parliament No 'not neer,telY fOSS Velleagees, but
yo*
king since has 'ever entered thelrease also the ghosts o linfredn or !FIJI"
of CoMintneS seed the Kins'.13 lllessen-
geS, when ho ,OOlnen to bring some
royal message, has the door elarnmed
in his face and is only a,draitted to
the Chamber after lie has knocked
three times an.d has received the
Speaker's permiesloit to advance up
the aisle to the great table.
Inside the House, near the entrance
th i w cross. the oar -
ere sa rpee na
-
pet. This is known as the''bar"
(tilers is also a long brass rod which
can be 'pulled out when 14 is requir-
ed). , It marks an important botaidary.
Above the bar the Chamber is in eels.:
sion; below it members can 'walk
about and talk and are technically
outside the House. It is at this bar
that men must :appear when they are
charged with • a violation of the priv-
ileges of Parliament, And in the past
the Speaker has sentenced many Men
to imprisonment. ' For the authority
of the House of Commons extends ev-
en to the passing of legal sentences,
when some affront to the dignity of
Parliament has beeu -cremated. This
• authority ' is, pf course, seldom
forced. •
Members of Paliarnent, you might
conclude from all this, have a high
opinion of themselves and of their du-
ties. Of themselves, no; of their 'du-
ties, yes. .We repeesea'such a diVei-
say .of views -that much of the proce-
dure has been devised to lessen the
hot anger that 'friction between these
views might generate. We must al:
en -
bef.
must
These privileges have nets been won
without bitter struggles. In them, a
-leading part has been played by the
Speaker, 'whose office has changed
with the years from that of spokes-
man appointed by his fellow members
to appeal on their behalf to the King,
Members. ef ParilaMent 4v1io lads
helped by their" wends to t,01101
good and hut golVernineat b tbai
place of the tyrana0. that (mat alwiwo
accompany government based uponl
force.
w aks address 'the _Speaker, for ex,
ample, and never .an.ollfer member of
the House. The aisle between the
Government - and the Opposition
benches is supposed to be wide eat
°Ugh to`p'revent a mereber
fronrlting-
ing at another with aseword.
-tilt on one subject all members of
all parties are in agreement -that the
House of Conimons is the most diffi-
cult and terrifying -place in which
they have eVer.made a speech. It is
terrifying ,because its traditions make
you humble: Exaggerated respect for
tradition is often -particularly in Bri,
taineea 'brake on progress. But the
traditions of the House of Commons,
its archaic rules and procedure, are
events-im
-
almost
terpreters of courses But the pilots
used to gel' and make diagrams in the
snow. We'd laugh a lot but somehow
we understood. But I still come
come back to thg. question of tag-
e'lleY
"One day a little Soviet pilot
Whoni we kneW' well, and who had
been to many of our awn parties -
got into a fight with a couple of Ger-
man machines. He shot down the
first, and he rammed the second -
wed then, having bailed out, he folight
his two opponents en the ground; and
killed them both -s -and then walked
back, four days and four nights in
the snove, with frOat-btaten
his face embed to pieces,
retired to hospitale,Where
down to see him.
"This:. seemed to :US not abnormal,
but typical, It stdedSlor so much
that. We N'id seen, With our own eyes
of the intensity with Whieh Russia, is
taking -the war. KitUllieSi and court-
eaS to us as guests-eeritainlY! Con
ffielity and cooperatipt, and fun, and
the endless exditemeat that aleereWe
:seen' to find in elle iatiothee's
OcIeletY. pit, at thelaiiert, .steel-atid
binek batfed o thSHlitt. They are
ix the Ifni; t&the antillt--ind
: 1e iue. death tif iihefeleas Our
Seteattered Mita Seta OE'
Alien% ate. )(kid, ttiv ith
'itayaIttc4htihtidtis4,441kitti.. Iiht this
tat ' hoe :Mt; tt.4iit�t end
thingk About Of'r
101" d 'Ott:* griL
feet and
and then
We went
Prime Minister may defy "him. At lite
order, the Sergeatit-at-Arms (with
black knee breeches, black silk stock-
ings and a sword) must expel mem-
bers whose behavior has displeased
him. Any member who is speaking
must at once resume his seat and re-
main silent if the Speaker rises to
his feet.
Who is this Speaker? He is chos-
en by his fellow members, More or
less regardless of party, as a man of
sound ju,dgmbna'fairneAs 'and integ-
rity, From the moment he accepts
his high office he lives a remote and
lonely life, since he must avoid any
contacts which ,eouldsrpossibV stiggest
favoritism.
Ile i:s both the ruler and the serv-
ant of the House. During the long
struggle between Ring Charles 1 and
Parliament, the Speaker of the day
made, one memorable and dignified
statement 'The 'king :had committed
his crowning b1tnider-4tavieg premis-
ed henCefdlaii e &Slew the advice of
ParliaMett, he had .'ins,rehed intothe
Hasse 'With hie Soldle0Sto ttriefit VO
members who had offended him.
These pend,poevverned, iiad eseaVed,
and to the angry eniptirlea of •
the
Xing, the gnealter_ateivered:
'May please /oar Idejestyo, .1.
have neither iliyea to see nor
to iittiettk fp:4MA, 'Place
itothe ,titetpiet6 (pta. to.0,>4004.
all -based
011
the
struggle of the common people against
privilege, -selfishness and injustice.
And when you stand to your feet and
IVIenu,
Dinner
. Fruit or Vegetable Cocktail
a Bouillon
Roast 'Chicken
Savoury Stiffing Grape Jelly
13rpwned Potatoes Baked Squash
'• Scalloped Cabbage
OR •
• Roast Goose
Sage and Onion. Dressing Apple Jelly'
Mashed, Potatoes . Diced Beeta
•
Creamed Celery
• OR
Roast Turkey
Giblet Staffing Cranberry Jelly
Parsley Potatoes gashed 'I'urnips,
Creamed Onions
Celery Curls
Radishes Carrot Sticks
Pudding
• or Hot Mince Pie
.Beverage
Lunch or Supper
• Creamed Meat •or Fish. with. Vegetables
on Split Tea Biscuits or in Toast Cups
Shredded Cabbage with Russians
Dressing
Cookies Beverage
OILCLOTH CONSERVATION
Oilcloth pasted down on the table
with a flour • paste will wear longer
tbanif it is tacked on. When tbite
done it cannot wrinkle or crack when
being washed. Waxing the oilcloth
will add to its 'Wear, toe.
EVERYONE MUST HELP
People living in apartments can
help save coal even though they may
never go near the furnace. Windows
shouldet be opened unnecesseallY: if
the apartment is too warm a. radiator
can be shut off. Hot water should be
used sparingly and leaking taps ie -
paired as soon as they start to drip.
Curtains and window shades can be
fuel savers too. By .keeping them
drawn at night, they will keep the
drafts 'out and the heat in.
N
OT. GUILD
PUT LIFE INTO. YOUR. PICTURES,
Always try to get life and human interest appeal in your picturee.
It makes them more enjoyable.
GOOD pictures are good pictures
N. -le -regardless of their particular
typo dr classtfleation. Thus, it does
net matter whether yo,l Sonsider
the above picttre as an informal
pertralt, a sport picture, a, hobby
picture, or a -vacation snapehot,
still a good pictire.
It is a pletare which would fit
nicely into any amatenr'S collection.
It is sufficiently pictorial for exhibie
tion -and equally suitable for the
albetn in which you keep your ren-
ted of outdoor fun and recreation.
And it is a Subject‘4hat could be
taken Walt an .itexpensive 'bee
camera ah well as, with the fleet
• precision mOdeI.-----,:• •
•Pieter() today isin't-a, mindere
„
sisapeheit. It WO, Vla1n0-,,pt11iaps
trio elate '.thithites' being reilleirad
ot; that paYpdse; The horse and
girl, were e6-1laded Plat th6 1%4
fell Properly oh the Ore fade. Note
• ton -that bead l ign/44.; the'
clattIt.linett&ohnit.'of die
. t!WWI* tide'. 44)6014'
tAtts-Okitf
tivenese. The girl is apparently
waving to someone in the distance.
That bit of planned action Putt
snap and life into the pleture: After
that planning the PirotogrivPher
chose his positien, focused proparly
and shot. SIniple enough, isn't itTe„
We hear much ,of "photographic
tedirniqu'e." The' dictionary defines
technique as: "The proper manner
01 dOlUg something." But too malty
seem to feel that phetographie tea-
niquois a matter of darkroom oper-
ation many eines, trying
to correct in the darkroom faults
that were overlooked when the pic-
ture was • snapped. That is Wrong..
• Th0 Proper time to intik° a picture
good is whenayou snap it. In tbe
dar'krocen, if you have one, apply :-.,..
your energies to making 0o4. pic-
tures better -not trying "to retrieve• - •
earehma abets, taken at irEindoni.•
' Try to get„,life and 'human inter
eat,appetil iiiyour„plettitenAquitll
.'the,.:441lef those hi the, Serifiee
to,ttddiftv, • • •• ' ••
&AM ViiiiSOttildee