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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 21 Apr 1949, p. 5

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¶~V'M~AT, A~9~L 21,t, 1940 TEE CANAD!AIi STATESMAIt flOWMAMV7T.t.I! EWPADE~ I ----. -~ ..-.---. - -I ~ PAGE FZY~ Hello Homemakers! Spring f e- ver? Eating the right foods helps to overcome that "duil" feeling. One quart of milk for cbildren, one pint for adults-that's the day's quota for good health. But you don't need to drink ail the milk. It's just as good for you if you eat it with cereals, in soups, creamed desserts. Wbether it cornes in botties, cans, or pow- dered in packages or creamed as cheese, miik is our most impor- tant food. Note: For prevention of cer- tain f evers, ail miik consumed at the farm home and rural scbeol should be pasteurized. Dinner Chowder 2 cups diced, raw potatoes SUMMER SCHOOL 0F ACTING JULY 4th to 29th Day and Evenlng Classes STERNDALE BENNETT Dîrector of The People's Repertory Theatre Royal Conservatory Players Asslsted by Jack Medhurst Hilda Sterndale Bennett Apply - Registrar Royal Conservatory of Music 135 Coilege St., Toronto C n'tFace Spring CaWithout a new PERMANENT Make an early appolntment wlth HUYCK'S for an lndividually designed CO IFFUIRE We Speclalize ln STEAM WAVE $ 10.00 and up Other Waves f rom $5.00 up Is your haîr difficuit H U YCK'S will give your hair problem speclal attention Phone 703 67 King Street West Bowmanville -cup sliced onion f4 cup diced celery 1%½ cups boiiing water 3 tsps. sait 3 tbsps. butter or margarine 1/4 cup flour 1 % tsps. bottled thick meat sauce 3 cups milk 11,2 cups grated processed Cheddar cheesiý 1 tbsp. mùnced pa isley 2½ý cups canned or cooked tomatoes 14 tsp. pepper 1 2 tsp. mustard Combine first 4 ingredients and 1 teaspoon saît in a deep kettie e: Dutch oven. Cover; simmer 15 min., or until tender. Meanwhile, melt butter in double boler. Stir in fleur, then remaining sait, pep- per, mustard, meat sauce and miik. Cook, wbile stirring, until smooth and tbickened. Ack cheese, and stir until melted. Adc to petato mixture with parsiey and tomatoes; heat. Serves 5. Creamed Cabbage and Frankfurters 4 cups sbredded cabbage 214 cups milk 4 frankfurters U4 cup melted fat 3 tbsps, flour 2 tsps. sait ýî. tsp. pepper 3/4 tsp. celery seeds 3/4 cup soft bread crumbb Cook cabbage in milk, covered, until tender-about 5 min. Cul frankfurters in quarters lengtb- wise; then split pieces in haif, Saute in fat in skillet untii lightiy browned. Remove frankfurters. Add next 4 ingredients to fat in skillet, and stir until smootb. Graduaily stir in miik. drained from. cabbage. Cook, stirring con- stantiy, until smooth and tbick- ened. Arrange layers of cabbage, frankfurters, and sauce in 10" x 6"x 2" baking disb; top with crumbs. Bake in moderately bot eiectric oven, 400 degs. for 15 mins., or until nicely browned. Serves 4 te 6. Siiced canned pork-and-ham loaf 11/2 cups) may replace frankfurters. Walnut Prune Pudding 'cup rice Y4 cup chopped, pitted raw prunes 3 cups milk i cup plus 6 tbsps. sugar 9<' tsp. sait 1/4 tsp. nutmeg i cup broken walnuts 2 tsps. grated lemon rind 2 eggs, separated Wash rice in coid water; drain. Combine with prunes and miik in doubleboiler; cook, covered, until tender-about 1 hour. Add i cup sugar, sait, nutmeg, nuts, and rind. Beat yo]ks; stir in rice mix- ture.% Pour into 11/2 quart casser- ole. Cool. Beat whites until near- ly stiff. Gradually beat in rest of sugar. 1{eap on pudding. Bake in moderate electric oven, 325 degs. for 20 mins. Serves 6. Take a Tip 1. Yo.U May compiete the dinner chowder menu with a green salad and a peach upside down cake for dessert. 2. With Creamed Cabbage and Frankfurters as a hearty supper dish, serve chilled tomato juice fîrst. The sweet part of thé meal may be a pastry-apple, raisin or date pie. 3. The unusuai wainut rice pudi- ding wili be the righit choice to serve foliowing a light entree such as cheese souffle with scal- loped potatoes and buttered peas. 4. Custards may be cooked in the eiectric oven after the heat basE been turned off and the casser-s ole meai has been taken out fort the table. 5. Junkets are nutritious milk des- IN THE 1000 ISLANDS Fer fun and relaxation in a scenic wonderland how would ynu like a luxurious cruise through (lie mazes cf tlîis wondî'rful waterwav? Gananoque "Gateway to the 1,000 Islatids," is on Ilighiaav No. 2, and the main CNR line, midwav I>tween Montreal anîd Toronto. Here, frein mid-June te mid-Sk'ptember, sighit-seeing boate Icave the watcrfront every hour. Yeu'll enjoy a nîagnifiecnt close-up view of colourful islands and millionaire sunmîr homes in Canadian and American waters. There's irst-class hotel and tourist accommodation threugheut the*district and at Gananoque-whose Beard of Trade wilI be glad to rend 3y()t further information. In Ontario we have a holiday paradise-lct's do ail we can to e'ncourage' vhitors from acro.'.s the border. liîlilied in support of the touristbui ness by John Labatt Limited. LET'S MAKE THEM WANT TO COME BACKI mount apen t on wages and sel- arien to know that there la no substantial relief to b. obtalned from this source. Here are the figures: In 1947 corporation pro- fits distributed as dividends a- mounted to £320 millions after the deduction of tax. This £320 millions compares with a total of wages, after deduction o! taxes, of £3,261i millions and sal- aries on the same basis o! £1,435 millions. So the figure o! profits is about a fifteenth of wages and salaries comabined. So, that even if corporation profits were reduc- ed by a quarter-a very drastie i blem. eut-lt would mnean an avmrag addition te salaries and waget 0 ne more than 4d. i the pound.0 Sir Stafford continued: "<The next stage therefcire In Our pro- gress is to increase the ,volume of our production. And that wSl also heip us to keep down priëe. and s0 increase real wages ýU markets for our exports."1 Isn't that about what freen- terprise ha. been saying: that economic secur-ty is not a matter o! sequestering profits but of us. ing them to stimulate productlônt That is the zeal core of aur pro. )r 15 ir It G... Gi A PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS MONTREAL--.ere's a Spring Housecleaning tip from a reader that I think you'I want to tryl Our reader-friend says "There's no doubt about it. winter-faded curtains respond like magie to Tintez dyes!1" Why not give your curtains the "lTintez Beauty Treatment "? Tintez Curtain Peach and Curtain Ecrat work like a charni te transforni duli curtains te curtains that look like newl Your home will look like Spring with Tintex-dyed cur-' taine at every window! Ask for Ail-fabric TINTEX Tinta and Dyes at your fai ourite drug, department or variet.y store. Tintex costz oniy 15c' a package and, remember, when you foleow the simple instruction&- goed resuite are guaranteed i Wise, Wise Mother is she who encourages smaîl daugh- ter's rnterest in the kitchen. . and what a help she can bel JELL-O jeiiy powders offer a wvonder!ul oppor- tunity for such occasions, for it'à se easij to inake Jelu-O 1% desserts and salads. And what a grand assortment of flaveurs there are for ber te choose fron . . . Jell-O'n seven, delicious "locked-in" flavour% - Strawberry, Raspberry, Cherry, Orange, Lemon, Lime and Pine- apple. Every inember of the family will enjoy the fresh-tasting flavour and sparkiing perfection of economicalJeul-O. Serve At often. Here's S o u p Te Sornethlng New .~ Pieuse A Mon - aomething different served with lots of . . . but something Just try this re- This Ch ocolat@ cipe, made with REINZ CON- Orange Frosting is DENSED VEGE- ful Of the iuscious TABLE SOUP-4> real chocolate flaver MEAT PIE WITlH BISCuITr . the flavor of BAIÇER'S UN* TOPPING Slb. raw beef, diced, or 1 cup SWEETENED CHOCOLATE. diced, Ieft-over meat CHOCOLATE ORANGE FROSTINQ 2 tbspns. fat 1ilo-oz. can Hejaz Condensed .. 2 tezaspoons grated or ang e Vegetable Sour ' rind 1 cup water Y .,4 ablespoons butter ,j tspn. sait 2 ussfe cn ua Dash cayenne peppei . L y 2quparesfte cing sar D no',2standard recipe for ~ sursBkraUset Dough ode biscuits ened Chocolate, melted Brown meat ia fat. if raw meat Dash of sait Io used, cook thoroughly. corn- 3 tablespoons orange j utc. bine meat, soup, water and season- ý ings and pour into a weil-greased' (about) casserole (5- x 81,' x 311). Pst bis- Combine orange rind and but- cuit dough to W,ý' thickness and ter; creamn well. Add part of cut with a 2" biscuit cutter. uagrdly.beinafr Arrange 8 biscuits on top of meat uagrdalbedgafe mixture. Bake in a hot oven (400 each addition. Add chocolat. deg. F.) for 20 minutes or until and sait and mnix well. Add re- biscuits are golden brown. Serves maining sugar, alternately wlth 2 to 3. orange juioe, until of rlght con- Yes, Heinz Condensed Soups sistency te spread. Beat thor. are versatile :' . - and popular! oughly after each addition. Four taste-tests, two among dieti- Makes enough frosting te cover cian, sowe an v~rheiing tops of about 2 dozen cup fin,8or Idean ovSoupa over cakes, tops of two 9-tnch lay- preference f r U i z S u s o e ers or top and aides f 8 x 8 x 2 . other popular braads! inch cake. Here's À Recipe For A Happy Home, taken fromn the "BANK 0F MONTREATi Cook Book" . FAM. ILY-SIZE RECIPE FOR SAVING FOR HOLI. DAYS, FOR EMERGENCIES OR OPPORTUN. 1 Household Savings Account for Father and Moth.i'. 1" Sunshine " Account for Sîster's Holiday. à SavIngs Account for Junior's paper-run money . - prepar. ,in for college expanses. cee f Canada Savings Bonde held by the BotM. tDo net ashow te cool 0? dry up, but pour In Ingredients reU. Slarly. The recipe may be adapted te any size of fally. Anremember, ail ingredients in this recipe may be obtained w* the ass,,istance cf the friendly helplulpeleoth unra yr tearest branch of the B cf pope nth cune a yu Nurses are the spearhead of the attack agarnst crippling candi- tiens in Ontario. Nurses for the Ontario Society for Crippied Chiidren attend and arrange spe- cial medicai ciinics, pay regular home visits, and instruct parents in home care. A service specialiy useful in rural areas. She foi- lows up ail polio cases reported serts te have on band fer the cbildren. 6. Miik scrved, on cereal is iess expensive and more nutritious than cream. Anne Allan invites you te write te ber c/o The Canadian States- man. Send in your suggestions on homemaking probiems and watch this column for replies. IAbridged Edition "Champlain Road" For Tercentenary "The Champlain Roa'g" by Franklin Davey McDoweil, re- tprinted la a special Huronian edi- tien, is a book for everyene. The serieus student of bistory wil find 'here a gripping re-enactmnent et the final struggle between tbe Iroquois and the Hurons, ending in the ebliteration et the latter. The student et religieus bistory will find the story of the Jesuit Fathers brought te lite and will foilow their heroic, if ill-fated leadership with interest. Those who prefer reading with a roman- tic flavor, wiil find pienty et it la the story o! handsome Captaîn Godfrey, Plantagenet Bethune, the beautiful, tempestueus Ara- koua, and the mysterieus, taunt- ing, unpredictable Diana. The adventure fan will be tbrilled with the vivid description of large-scale Indian -batties, of desperate hand-to-hand combat, and ot a bravery doubly impres- sive because it is net altegether imaginary but is an account based on actual tacts. The critical stu- dent o! literature will be satis- fied tee, for here is a well-written stery able te stand in the fore- most ranks et Canadian litera- ture. 0 The edif ion is issued te comn- memorate the tercentenary of the martyrdom et the Jesuit mission- aries. The original novel, publish- ed in 1939, won for its author the Governor General's Award for Fiction, It is Mr. McDewell's tbird book. The background et The Champ- lain Road is the two climatic y cars et the death struggle of the Huron Nation, 1648-49, and the stery of the martyrdern o! the five Jesuits who perished se beroicaiiy. The book is of particular inter- est te Simcoe County residents sînce most o! the action described takes place on the shores ef the Wye River, near Midiand. But it is a fascinating book for any- one wbo is interested in the Cana. dian scene. The Champlain Read is published by Marmillan's at $3.50. For the information of eur yeunger readers we may state Mr. McDowell 15 a Durham County Boy, baving been bora in Bowmanviile. His father was the late Frank McDowelI who was a member et the famous D.O. & P. Ce. Band fer many years. The autber's grandparents were Rev. D. C. Doweil, Bible Christian ruinister o! this town, and John Davey, prominent farmer et Les- kard. BROWN'S Mr. and Mrs. Nivens and Jim- my are spending the holiday week-end in Leamington. Orono Juniors have been sport- ing their pictures in the different newspapers. This goes to show how the Championship news traveis. Be sure and attend the "Boys' " dance on Friday night. The smeit are running and SO are the peopie with their nets. Sympathy is extended to Mrs. Geo. Law and famiiy upon the death of ber brother, Mr. Wm. Harris in Mindon. Several of the neigbbors attended the funerai. Miss Cain, teacher at Brown's, is enjoying ber holidays at ber home in Orono. Mrs. Geo. Stephenson and LN-nne in Toronto on Mondas'. Mrs. C. Avery and Lloyd visited in Oshawa. The men are on the land once again. Miss Jean Clark visited Mr. and Mrs. 1. Clark, Monday. Miss Peggy Stephenson holu- dayed with Mr, and Mrs. Ray Ried and Kirk in Shannonville.. Thie British Government bas launcbed a '"dont-lose-your-tem- per" drive because too nn telephones iwere being put out of order by people slamrning receiv - ers. and makes necessary arrange- ments for sending chiidren te one o! the specialiy equipped crippi- ed chiidren's camps. At the camps, the Director in charge is a registered nurse and bas at least two registered nurses werking with ber at ail times. At the le! t, are shown two nurses giving milk te their charges during one of Miss MacPhail Gets Tough About Cobourg Girls' School Agnes MacPbail, wandering political spinster now sheitered in the Ontario Legisiature, tbinks the Superintendents of Boys Training Scboois are treated bet- ter than the lady Superintendents in the Girls School at Cobourg. Speaking in the Legisiature, Mar. 31, she gave Hon. Geo. Dunbar just one year te even things up or she weuid get teugb about it. But she concluded with a word of praise for the Ontario Plan and said: "I tbink at last we are on the right track." Readers will be interested in the !oliewing passage which be- gins on P.1772, Hansard, abeve date: Miss MacPhail: Wben 1 arn beîng nice, I arn very, very nice. TbeY are excellent schools. I was tremcndousiy impressed by the Superirxtendent ef beth scheois, Mr. Eastaugb, and bis assistants, Mr. Rickard and Mr. Little. Again I say the thing is now in the hands ef peeple who understand reformation. and understand re- habilitation. 1 was surprised and delighted te find both Mr. East- augh and Mr. Little have great accomplishments, net eniy acad- ernicafly, but one does really very fine painting, and the other is a very accemplished musîcian. The tjhing bas changcd se cempleteiy it is bard te believe. 1 went te the epening exercises and stayed areund most of tbe day. I was treated beautifully. However, I ceuld net belp but feel they bad everything and that when yeu go te the girls' scheoi at Cobourg, Miss Isabel J. Mac- their rest periods. At the right, Is shewn one special piece of equip- ment utilized for giving a crip- pied cbiid a shower bath. Such a simple thing as a shewer bath for a normal person 'becomes a major problem te those who cannet heip tbemselves. Such preblems and special services raise the cest of operating such camps. It is nec- neili, O.BE., who is doing ex- cellent work, has nething like as much te work with as is the case in Bowmanviile and Gaît. 0f ceurse, I knew we women did net bave equal pay for equal work, and I knew wemen are just coming eut of long centuries of servitude, but I did net expect te find such a distinction as I did between Bexvmanviiie and Gaît on the one hand and Cobourg on the other. There are excellent places for the men te live, separ- ated from their charges, but Miss Macneill, who is just' as weli trained, bas eniy a bedroom and a batbroom for berself in the building where ail these girls, or at least baif of themn are. I be- iieve she was in Stratbmore, and her assistant, Miss Berry, in Mc- Cook. I must say te the Hon Minister (Mr. Dunbar) that is net geed; I give the Hon. Minister a year from now te remedy it, and if it is net remedied within a year, I arn geing te kick up a fearful row. I am going te get the Women's Auxiliaries, the United Church, the Women's Institute, and I am geing te go around and get ail the wemen mad at him, and that is goîng te be tough. Mr. Dunbar: They are ailltri- ends of mine, you could net get them mad at me. Miss MacPbaii: Oh, yes I wiil. It is just tee bad that sich ex- cellent accommedation is previd- td for the superintendents at Bewmanville and Gaît, and is net provided for the superintendent at Cobeurg. It is just net good eneugb. In, Britisb, U.S.A. and South African laberatories, aifalfa is be- ing studied as a nutritieus table foed. cessary to spend $4.75 per day per child at these camps. The Society and its affiiiated 120 odd On-tario LService Clubs, which includes the Bowmanvjlle Rotary Club, are at- tempting to raise funds for nurs- ing services and their camps 1through their annual Easter Seal Sale. As We Were Saying By Joseph Lister Rutledge We are asked to believe that 1under a pianned econemy ail the ecenemic bugbears that have ai- flicted us will disappear and al our ecenemic hopes will beceme estabiished tacts. The advocates et such planning have heen se sure that profits are at the reet ef rising costs that it has been easy te convince themselves that sociaiizing profits wiil immediate- ly resuit in wages meving sharply upward and prices meving stead- ily down. It is tee bad that such ample faith cannot be awarded the sup- port et coid facts. But, in Britain wbere this hopeful experiment is being tried, the facts remain ob- durate. They will net support this balie!. More and more in- dustries are being seciaiized. More and more profits are dis- appearing, or geing inte the hands of government as pianned. But stili the promised resuit does net follow. Last year the cost o! living in Britain went Up ten per cent while wages wîth ditficulty ciimbed six per cent. That was a net ioss, net the miliennîum that was promised. In Canada where we de net yet enjey the benefits of this planning the increase in cest of living 1946-47 was 12.1 % but the wages in ail manutactur- ing industries went up 25%. Undoubtedly the more ardent planners will mereiy argue that a larger slce e! profits must be taken under the plan. Sir Staf- ford Crîpps, one e! the head planners, finds littie encourage- ment in that idea. He said at Margate in September last: "We have only te look at the figures et distributed corperatien profits, and compare them with the a- FDTURRMIC STYLI FDTDRRMIC DRI VI They're great cars, these dasbing new FUTURAMIC Oldsmobiles! Beautiful, ye ... with an overali impression of fleet, flowing smartness that's obvious at your very flrst glimpse. And beautiful, too, in every last detail inside and out. When you do step inside a Futuramic Oldsmobile vou find vourseif in a far roomier car - witli 7k 4eeae 7%»?loo new conîlort, new viion ... casier to get in and out of.. eaîsîer and more deligli tfiul 10 drive - And this car is a thrill to drivé, dîaîîks b oFiîîuramic power .. from a new, improved Big Six or froin Oldsmohile's revolutionary feRockeîss Engine. And Oldsinobile was irst with world- famous GM Hydra-Matic Drive!* *Standard cquepment va Se: jes 88, oitiontal ai extra cost on Series 76. 1 1 t dO.t0LO SMOBILE1 ROY W. NICHOLS CHEVROLET, PONTIAC, OLDSMOBILE, BUICK AND CADILLAC CARS CHEVROLET AND G.M.C. TRUCKS COURTICE a a a ONTARIO Nursing Services* Are Nucleous to Correcting Crippling Conditions 0.94" TRVMDAT, AMM Slot IM TEM CANADUN STATESMM. BOWbL4NVffýLt. ONTARTM qftàmm ý

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