The Huron Expositor, 1952-11-28, Page 6airiaaa • .: iatair
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11
TRE HURON Execomer0
, e
t'
men's Institutes
Rally at Egrnondville
new yei*Wr n(Iron DQUIstY
-eusPastItutek. wOo Satecess-
ly carried out laSt Friday when
.1,0Yer 60 maa
embers tgistered frdm
eeept, west and smith 'Warm dis-
4,ricts for a county rally* Egmond-
'Ville United 'Ohareh Vita morning
•i,mad afternoon missteps, Which were
•ttaided over by Mrs. Irene Johns.
Woodham, diatriet Preeldent of
;40uth Huron. 1
mous t, moothg anesion, the
Aniembers were divided into various
diScussioni groups which were most
'nterestIng. Following this Miss
• Nora, ClinalinghaFa, Rtion connty
eupervisor„, of„, niirses, no an ad -
'dress, and igif,t. Scrimgeour
eontribnted a reading:
During the noon recess, the hos-
tees ibranch served tea for a pot-
luck lunch.
Reassembling for the afternoon
session, the conveners of the dis-
cussion groups reported the find-
ings of each group.
Make 1,000 Potholdere
Mrs. McCann, ,Fordwieh, contri-
buted two very appropriate read-
ings.
Mrs. Ernest Hobbs, of St. Marys,
recently -elected chairman of Lon-
don convention area, gave a splen-
did address, enlarging on the
theme used at the London area
convention, "There is no time but
•
YOU CAN DEPEND ON
When kidneys fail to
renncto v e e awaste,,egot __
a
DODDS l',,
tteStatlbedrKID Id
follow. Dodds;
Kidney Pills stimu- ''',,
; PILLS
late kidneys to \.11, , ,,,,....---7-°,6'
normal duty. You v‘...., ..t.,,
feel better—sleep..,,,,t-z.•;--::`-'r,,,,,w
better, work better.
Get Dodd's at any 1kte.°*:',''''''' ,,:'
drug store. You can
depend on Dekre.
50
•
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#12Zi afek5e-
' garti-a k 6- 4'
FIND IT HARD to relax in the den-
tist's chair ? Then you'll be glad to
know that the dentist's drill now
has a rival — a new device which
"drills" teeth by means of a fine
spray of aluminum oxide powder.
They say the new technique takes
the "ouch!" out of having a
tooth fixed.
Manufacturers in many fields
keep coming up with new uses
for aluminum. And our research
people are often called on for
help in finding a remedy for their
production aches and pains. Many
times the result is another Cana-
dian plant opening up to make a
new and 'useful aluminum pro-
duct. Aluminum Company of
Canada, Ltd. (Alcan).
MAW," Mrs. Norman, Keating, of
Winghara, provincial board direc-
tor, brought greetings.
It was 'decided that members of
Huron Countwill make 1,000 pot -
holders, to be peesented to the dele-
gates of the Association Country
Women of the World at the coming
convention es souvenirs from the
Members of Huron county.
The Cenvention will be held in
Toronto next August. An invite -
lien ;tun East Mimi district was
accepted to bold the seciin,d county
rally there next falL
L.O.BA. Euchre Party
Has 15 Tables in Play
The L.O.B.A. sponsored,a euchre
party last Friday evening, when
there were 15 tables in play. The
following were the prize winners:
ladies, first, Miss ,Nellie Prye-e;
lone hands, Mrs. R. MeClure; con-
solation, "Mrs. 'David Topple; men,
first, A. C. Routledge; lone hands,
Percy Little; consolation, David
Papple. A draw, made for an angel
cake, *as won by Alex Muir.
(Continued from Page 2)
a minimum necessary to achieve
some improvement in nutritional
standards. 'Actually the demands
of this expanding ,population for
agricultural products are becoming
more marked since the end of the
seeond World War. This is espe-
cially so with industrial nations
where purchasing power is increas-
ing, and distribution of income is
tending to become equalized. In
Europe, for example, it is estimat-
ed by F.A.O. officials that food re-
quirement* will increase over the
next five years by 1-2 per cent per
annum through changes in income
and by an additional one per cent
on account of population growth.
In many under-develoPed areas
this,' trend manifests itself more in
terms of increasing requirements
than of effective demand. The pend
ple in these regions are changing
their attitude on the acceptability
of a low standard of living and are
exerting .ever-increasing pressure
on their governments or on their
governing authorities for more food
and more and better housing. •
* * *
Farm Loan Board
Reports Activities
The 23rd annual report of the
Canadian Farm Loan Board for
the year ended. March 31, 1952, has
just been issued. The Board is a
Dominion 'Government agency en-
gaged in making long term mort-
gage loans to farmers.
Applications for loans d'ropp'ed
16 per cent during the year the
total amount aPproved for loans,
$4,238,400, was only 10 per cent
less tha.0 in the previous year. At
• PHONE
STONE'S
FOR
PROMPT REMOVAL OF
DEAD OR DISABLED
COWS — HORSES
WM. STONE SONS LTD.
PHONE COLLECT
INGERSOLL 21
• WM. SPROAT, SEAFORTH, 655 r
•
To
6,0keeep
Teel We&
9 we a,.
&ma".
0:.capa 00 Bank
...I • '
,44,f
March 21, 1952, the Board held Ida
Arilt 1..49014.4,ge
tal amount of $28,365,9604 7*,:,p
Board Mao held 2815;14'icaskrtane
loana'Snonittif $14461,-
452.15. The principal aMiets, ander
administration comprisitaV,Icain ao,
coants, sale agreements and reel
estate increased by $1,404.§19 O. a
total of $29,864,551, the largest
amount Once 1944. The, Board be-
ing self-sustaining pays its awn
costs of operation which increased
31/2 per cent during the year of
$443,845.
Board officialstate that the
moderate decline in voliime, of new
business experienced --in the Last
two years will likely be revered
during the current year as a result
of the amendment to, the Canadian
Farm. Loan Act passed in June,
1952, increasing the maximum loans
from $5,00() to sig,croo The rrent
interest rate on first mortgage !s
5 per cent.
Except in British Columbia and
• New Brunswick enquiries about
loan's should be made to the Cana=
(lien Farm Loan office in the pro-
vincial capital concerned. The ad-
dress in British Columbia is New
Westminster and in New Bruns-
wick, Saint John. Enquiries ,from
Newfoundland should be addressed
to Ottawa.
,f '11 _on h'
T H E
BOWL
114
1
"Wit"
HYDRO
HOME ECONOMIST
COMPANY DINNER
Hello Homemakers! When Ain
ericans visit our homes during the
weekend they will revive many
election incidents. They may also
recall that the President of the
U.S. proclaimed the first Thanks-
giving on November 27, 1789.
Be prepared for a "chinwag" and
plan now to prepare tradi'tioual
Thanksgiving foods. Our sugges-
tions are quick and easy dishes
such as pumpkin soup, roast cured
ham, apple prune dressing, brown-
ed potatoes, mashed turnips, jellied
carrot salad, mincemeat. pie and
tea or coffee.
Pumpkin Soup
cup strained pumpkin
1 can cream chicken soup
Pa cups. milk
Salt and pepper.
Combine cooked pumpkin, con-
densed chicken soup, milk and
seasoning. Heat, to steaming point.
Serves seven.
Apple Prune Dressing
3 cups diced bread
IA cup melted butter
1 cup diced apples
cup diced prunes
ia cup flute
1 tsp. salt
ltbsp. lemon juice.
Combine and bake in greased
custard cups for 20 minutes dur-
ing baking period for roast pork.
M,ashed Turnips
Cook match -size pieces of turnip
in salted water for 25 minutes.
Drain and mash. For six or seven
servings add 1 tablespoon flour, 1
tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon
brown sugar and 1 teaspoon finely
grated orange rind. Beat. Re-
heat over ot water. Serve.
Jellied Carrot Salad
Dissolve a package of pineapple
flavored gelatine with one cup hot
water and one cup cold water. Stir
in one teaspoon lemon juice and
set to jell. Whea partly thicken-
ed add one cup grated carrot light-
ly sprinkled with salt.
Apple Mincemeat Pie
21/2 cups thick applesauce
1 2/3 cup canned mincemeat
1/3 cup brown sugar
2 tbsps. batter
Pastry dough.
Combine applesauce, mincemeat,
sugar and butter. Line a 9 -inch pie
plate with pastry and fill with mix-
ture. Roll out remaining dough,
design and top over moistened edge
of lower pastry. Press edges to-
gether with fork. Bake in oven of
42 5degrees for 35 minutes.
The Question Box
Mrs. J. K. asks: When do you
put the glaze on top of fruit cakes
so the icing will stick?
Answer: Brush the glaze on
fruit cake when the cake is abso-
lutely 991d.' Add- icing immediate-
ly.
Mrs'. IL. R. asks: How can' we
bake cake mixes in paper cups
without losing their shape?
Answer: Place paper cups, in
zinc jar bands on a cookie sheet
before pouring cake mix into them.
Miss M. P. asks: iHow can we
keep crunchy cookies crisp for a
week or more?
Answer: Store in a covered
cookie jar with two cubes of sugar
beside them. Keep in a cool place.
They may ,be crieped by placing a
few on a pie plate in a warm oven
for three or four minutes.
Mrs,.N. M. asks: What could be
the ingredients of a sponge made
of cranberries with a curry flavor?
Answer: Use a tin of cranberry
jelly. Crush with a fork and sprite
kle 34 teaspoon of curry over it.
Beat well and chill.
Mrs. C. D. asks: How can we
When',,a Rood washed out the
railrOad line to a small 'cite Where
a certain speaker was scheduled to
make an address, he telegraphed.
the chairman of the coramittee,
"Cannot arrive on time. Wasihout
on line."
• He was surprised to reeeive an
answer by return wira.advialug;
it.,4t'
-0t1* OUi6itir5Uog
• 4j: '
4 ' , 1,.
CLINT
Returned to the reeveship in
Clinton was J. W. Nediger,
shown here, at the nomination
last Friaay. In the running for
mayor are William J. Miller,
Bert Gliddon and present May-
or G. W. Nott. For deputy -
reeve are Melvin Crich and R.
Y. Hattin. Council, six to be
elected: Dudley Pegg, Morgan
Agnew, George Knights, Clif-
ford Ashton, Carl Draper, Mel-
vin Crich, L. G. W'inter, Bert
Gliddon, Stewart Schoenhals,
Burton Stanley.
perk up the flavor of cold chicken
as a salad?
Answer: To 11/2 cups didn't
chicken add 1 teaspoon lemon
juice, ae cup diced raw celery, 1
tablespoon minced browned al-
monds, 1 teaspoon slivered ripe
olives, 14 teaspoon accent and 1/3
cup mayonnaise. (It is. mono sod-
ium glutamate and makes good
chicken taste better without add-
ing any additional flavor),
Anne Allan invites you to write
to her c/o The Huron Expositor.
Send in your suggestions on home-
making .probleras and watch this
column for replies.
t
,t• ,1 • •
AI5A,
One-WaY S*4„4.
There is a right and, 'a. wrong
way of bruelfiag the teeth !Belida
ing from side toside, won't do the
job of removing food partItelee lodg-
ed between the teeth after eating;
that requirescalerway.dtion
starting at the ,gUIPRatkalti'llivaeeitaAng'
out to the httlng, edge, h.P.tha-frOlat.
and back. Thlnehould,,be done .11e
mediately after . eating. so that. MI
the acid-Mei:Ong 'particles maybe
removed before they have time. to.
cause trouble.
Straying Teeth
When a Mali Child loses one of
his baby teeth prematurely, it may Infant deaths are often blamed
happen that the teeth on either side on meet:fanjet suffocation, through
:14: WAY t140 RefeVil4Vvi°11,1PY,',
'esOpied laynthe'160-4Anitite-:'14tiene
j!Theil. the Second • OF TioLvonout
teeth growif in, the ',Space is al-
ready tilled and the ttecOild.tooth
art:m(164 out. T1113 mens that one
or 'novo IMei*. will be misplaced or
nreekedt With POSSible swindle*.
titter& Early dental treatment helps,
prevent We tronble.
Fish, Versatile Food
Canadians do not eat sufficient
tish, although it is readily avail-
able at mod_erate =tees. Although
Canada etipplies' many foreign. mar-
kets Canadians themselves do not
take advantage of this excelleat
,Souree of ,proteins, nitnerals and
Vit./Mains. There is eneugh variety
our AO an shellfish to suppl
the most exacting epicure witi
dishto. his Mte, Experimenting
recipee.featuting thb gives the
heUtiewife rewarding resulte in the
family's. aepreciatioiL
Infant Mortality
FOURTH ANNUAL SALE
of
Scotch Shorthorns
5 BULLS and 28 FEMALES
COMMUNITY PARK FAIR BARNS
Clinton, Ontario
TUES., DEC. 2nd
at 1:00 p.m., sharp
Sponsored by the following Huron County Shorthorn Breeders:
ROBERT M. PECK & SONS KIPPEN
McKINLEY'S FARM and HATCHERY ZURICH
CLIFFORD H. KEYS & SONS VARNA
JOHN OSTROM VARNA
ROY F. PEPPER & SON SEAFORTH
For catalogues, write any of the above
flietteletbesa—lt"iieS beefl4oYOee!oh1 &i. d. oTwOna -OV
e4, however, that *AT ,RVth. O:F14t. tho, PAW SAO .1110.4k74, i.PS.1,1,41,
tragedies are dee nOt.40,4afi, 04 l' - ' ' :),Nit '1'.; . .13
414. tit „4gPei Pr:90. ot.,7`,M0,411141$ ,,,44,OS*44104MirC vio,0#11410
4400kogi'.',444$0 10,8v0i0ked•* ,„i0k4'oOlsitorSA)?o, Ygil,
ise'aftraYs 'Wise "te:ke0 4:01.'qnfantlefire.F.-herOeicetWitilMOie.tUgaMs
awAy from .veroile, Whe' are 'filierff, to tell ,Wito ..iS4'saieithing it4Where
Ing from celda and, at the firat the voices Celtic frOM?" he was ask -
1
sign of respiratory difietifie, a doe,' ed.
tor should be consulted. it,it Is • "Yea* sir."
.
necessary for anyone suffering "And when dees this_ ; occur "
from a cold to attend a baby, a "When I answer the telephone."
1
For those you love, make this Christmas an
event they'll never forget! Canadian National
oFfers an attractive Gift Certificate covering
Train Travel anywhere . . . to any rail destina-
tion ... for any amount you wish ... on sale
et all Canadian National ticket offices. Easy to
buy, easy to use. A gift that's sure to please.
CANADIAN NATIONAL
THE ONLY RAILWAY SERVING ALL TEN PROVINCES
for a
moolkfin
steadier . . . more level . . . softer
• „„
. ,
•• • • , ••,...
•
•—•
• 't
new performance
You'll like the finer performance of,
the new Dodge, its ease of handling
when parking ... its nimbleness in
heavy traffic or on the highway. It's a
more compact automobile yet there's
more room' than ever:Ter-delver and
passengers. It's a safer car because
of the greatly increaepa vision area,
curved one-piece Windshield and
wide, wrap-arofind rear window.
traditiona' 1 dependabilily
Any Dodge:owner Will tell you: "You
calla beat fledge for Dependability."
And this 1115,3 Dodge has' been, en-
gineered and built ,to maintain this
enviable repidatiati. illousoittis of
(Atte Utiles of troublOree ciPtiVatitirl
are beat into,Dodeth assere You of
More Pleasant driving hettmeetetis
time lest in service and .eetiorr,,
•
drive the all-new
Illustrated—Dodge Regal 4 -door sedan includes certain
extra equipment items. Check with your local Dodge
dealer for information ore standard equipment.
Papas
When you drive a 1953 Dodge, you have the promise of the
smoothest, softest, most stable ride you have ever experienced
in a car in the lower-priced field.
Here's how this new ride has been engineered.
It's a steadier ride because of a wider frame, a lower centre of
gravity, and the new positioning of the wider rear springs.
It's a more level ride, the result of a synchronized springing
and: scieraific weight distribution.
It's a softer ride because of the new principle
Oriflow shock absorbers, and new, wider springs which absorb
most of the small road shocks.
Be one of the first to experience this thrilling new ride.
At:range today with your Dodge -DeSoto dealer
for a demonstration.
DODGE REGENT • DODGE CRUSADER
DODGE MAYFAIR • DODGE SAVOY • DODGE SUBURBAN
Manufactured in Canada by Chrysler Corporation of Canada, Limited •
Ask your DODGE-DESOTO (kaki- about the 75 lino features of the '53 DODGE
a '1
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