Durham Region Newspapers banner

Port Perry Star (1907-), 6 Feb 1958, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Advertising helps raise the standard) My way of joking is telling the ~ of living by raising the standard of | truth, That Kivi, Bill joke in longing. Jordan. = ~ |the world, --Shaw. Cr Pate Ee It isn't your position that makes| I honestly believe it iz better tew you happy or unhappy. " I¥s your dis- | know nothing than tew know what position, --Baron de La Montesquieu, | ain't 80. ---Josh Billings. yw oid Good News for Homemakers CREAMY SAUCE TOPS .. TURKEY SANDWICH *- p turkey or chicken sandwiches Step into your kitchen, Milady, and © stir up some "New Soups from Two Soups"! It is wonderful to discover how Wany extia Special soups you tah con=| Tq coct this way . . .-by simply combinin ith : : : an' 2 can i oe kind with guste You ith & deliv o Tomy Slice for ant ay already be a soup mixer. And once "hicken 5 ; re - you begin making combinations, you 2 shivkey so Ho ia soup) find a treasury of new sotips to brighten with 1 can (134 cu 5) sou op mn - meals for vour:family. Busy home- lace slices of Cathey or Shere ha makers enjoy serving such sturdy Bitiered toast. Soh a rk sb quick dishes. She amount of hot sauce over each. Pass Happy couples" among the soups | cranberry relish, celery and olives to are standbys like tomato with. onion; complete the repast. Remember hot 3 cream of chicken with cream of celery; | coffee too. . vegetable soup with chicken noodle. Soups with the same basic flavour, of such as.the four beef kinds, will com- TOP CHOPS WITH V-8 SAUCE bine into a variety of lip-smacking new delicacies, ~ ¥ 2 Cold weather is pork chop time. To Try--DBeef Soup with Beef Noodle | Set the chops up as real company fare, Vegetable Beef Soup with | Pour on about 1 cup of V-8 juice as the "= "Beef Noodle meat cooks.-Use this amount for 4-6 ' Beef Soup with Onion | chops. Let them simmer about 45 Hi You can even mix three soups for a minutes or until tender, dependiifg on ~ "Three" star success Try tome. of the thickness of meat. Check the fryin these and you'll be plotting many other Le fy tan to ps od happy matches as you look over the charm" i - la p= ae Ye arm" into pork chops--a saveur ? dozens of kinds in a can. meal with flufty hited potatoes i BEEF NOODLE--DANDY SOUP 1 can (1Y4 cups) condensed beef son 1 can (1Y{ cups) condensed beef noodle soup broccoli in lemon sauce, CHICKEN. BREASTS AU GRATIN The French may be famous for their 134 soup cans water Spica but this dish will win bravos for > : elegance with a minute's-effort. Place 1 Ty BEEFY--ONION.NOODLE soup pound chicken breasts in single layer sd can (1X4 cups) condensed beef soup [in buttered shallow baking dish (about 1 can (I1Y{ cups) condensed beef i noodle soup .~ ° \ 1 can (1) cups) condensed onion 10" x 6" x 2"). Pour 1.can (1}{ cups) condensed cream of chicken sofip over chicken. Bake one hour 350°F. Last - soup 10 minutes of cooking time sprinkle 2 cans waler | 14 cup (2 ounces) shredded mild pro- lend soups. Heat and simmer about | cess cheese over chicken--makes 3-4 § minutes. - servings. |1ed Port Perry all the way, going out Detroit--2 ! ki ; Check your Schedule--Be on time (half hour before game). Get Maw or Pa to watch. .° ' PEE-WEE STANDING Teams -- Uxbridge, Brooklin and Port Perry, ! Teams . Pts. PORT PERRY -- 10 UXBRIDGE --- 4 BROOKLIN -- 0 Port Perry Scorers . Goals Ass. Pts, Barry Beare ........b Barry Oke ......cccpuri000 6 Dale McNenly ...... wend *Larry Brown ....... Jim Gray ......oonnl Bob Lee ..uinininl 'Brian Gibson ......c.uin1 »~ -- - OO = DO DCO CS Dave Menzies ........0 - Dave Ballingall ..........1 Ron Raines .....cuinl bo DO BO BO CO Bh OT -3 OO Don Locke .....ummunnd PORT PERRY PEE-WEE'S PLAY UXBRIDGE FRI. NIGHT 6.45 at the Memorial Gardens Port Perry. All school children should come out and cheer. ---------- Port Perry Bow 121 Whitby Juveniles, sponsored , by Jerry Gray's Men's. Wear, insured themselves of a tie for first place in the MHA Juvenile league Saturday night, when they defeated Port Perry in the Whitby arena 12 to 1. The closest rivals to the Whitby boys are Lindsay, who are four points behind Whitby, but have two more games to Whitby's one. However, a win over Lindsay would insure Whit- by of first place in league standings this year. In .Saturday night's game, Whitby in front 4 to 0, at the end of the first period, 6 to 0 at the end of the se- cond period, and the final score 12 - 1. 'The league standings to Feb. 3 P WL TPts Whitby .oveverssssrsrsenns 11 10 1 0 20 Lindsay isin 10 8 2-0 16 Bowmanville ........... .11 4 7 0 8 Port Perry cnn 12 012 0 0 DOMINION ~ REAL SPECIALS HENLEY'S CHOICE 28 OZ. - TIN 2 tins 69c. LYNN VALLEY STANDARD, TIN 6 tins $1.00 CANNED PEARS MARMALADE AUNT SALLY'S - 24 OZ. JAR . 3 jars $1.00 FANCY 14 OZ TIN "| NIBLET CORN 6 tins $1.00 -CULVERHOUSE - | CANNED PEAS CHOICE, 20 OZ. TIN 6 tins $1.00 Pineapple and Grapefruit Juice vsrn~ 3 tins $1.00 MARGARINE ~~ oi 4 Ibs. $1.00 © |DoGFOOD |. mA Dims BANANAS ~~ a 2 lbs. 2c | GRAPEFRUIT = sus 5 for 2c. All Merchandise sold at your Dominion Store is unconditionally guaranteed to give 100%. Satisfaction ~~ || Dominion Store Lid. PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 7, 8. ~ Port Perry, Oni. no | WeDeliver ~~. Phone 5 ad | | Ladies' Monday Night League Wolfs--26. Squirrels--16 Tigers--26, , Racoons--16 Camels--24. Skunks--15 Elks--24, - Beavers--13 Foxes--19. Lions--11 Bears--18. Elephapts-- 3 High Single-- Elsie Pogue--256 High Triple-- Mary Amell--590 Over 200-- te iy "Elsie Pogue--256; Mary Amell-- 260; Barbara Amell--236; Joan Lane (--224; T, Hall--219; L. Raines--210; Elma Vernon--207; Ann Dowson 206; Doris Healey--204. Most Blows-- - D. Howsam (?) Ladies' Wednesday Night Bowling January 29th-- Sunderlands--38. Mustangs--26 Bombers--31, North Stars--19 - Spitfires--381. Helecopters--18 Flyers--29, Lancasters--16 _ Hurricanes--28. Mosquitoes--16 Jets--26. Kittyhawks--10 Over 200-- Glenda Taylor--248; Beth Oke--247; Donna Van Camp--245; Cathy Hewitt |--286, 208; Mary MacGregor--235; Ruby Leask--234; Merle St. John-- 281, 230; Marion Geer--=281, Dorothy Jardine--226; Helen Heard--225; Ma- rie Wakeford--222; Betty Collins-- 222, 206; Ruth Short--220; Marilyn Hutchinson--215; Norma Howsam--- 211; Pam Knight--211; Eleanor Caw- ker--210; Bety® Moore--210; Mabel Cook--209; Mary Sweetman -- 205; Mary Enge--205; Marie Healey--203; Audrey DeNure--203; Joan Venning --202. 600 Triples-- Betty Collins--016; Ruth Short-- 614; Cathy Hewitt--612; Merle St. John--606; Mary MacGregor--604. Dismise Charge in : Signal Case | A charge of disobeying a traffic siy- nal against Ross Short, of Seagrave, was dismissed in Oshawa Traffic Tra- ffic Court Tuesday. The accused plead- ed not guilty. r Constable T. Holmes tesified that he had investigated a traffic accidetn, at the intersection of King and Mary streets, on January 4. William Sabyan Ritson road south, told the court that he had driven across. the intersection on the green signal and had been hit by the Short car from the right.. JArpad Marton, a witness to the ace- ident, also claimed that the accused had crossed against the red light. The accused was defended by Terence V. Kelly. CC r-- aa SCIENCE IN YOUR LIFE Care With Cleaners ' Cleanliness may be next to godli- f ness -- but it also can be dangerous, | Certainly many human beings go to ° meet their Maker because of clean- | - ing fluids and laundry bleaches, A "It is surprising how much a | locked cabinet or even a tightly * closed container on a high shelf might do to make unnecessary a discussion of laundry bleach poison- ing," says the Pfizer Spectrum, a ' + medical magazine. Bf 7 Many house- R€9 v-- wives thoughtless- 21"; ated laundry blea- 1 ) ! ly store chlorin- 4 ches and the cleaning fluid, J carbon tetrachlor- ! ) ide, in soda-pop { containers, wine | bottles and even baby bottles, These . are even placed on the floor within * easy reach for toddlers in an explor- | ing stage of life. ( - After 'a seven-year study, three . doctors reported in the Canadian « Medical Association Journal that carbon tetrachloride is one of the | commonest medical causes of ser- The fluid can have dangerous ef- fects whether it is inhaled, swal- lowed or absorbed rough the skin, | The corrosive and €austic action . of the chlorinated alkaliés used as laundry bleaches are well-known to | anyone who has mourned a favorite | arment eaten away by strong laun- ¢ ry bleaches, When swallowed, ! l ious and even fatal kidney damage, | { these chemicals cause severe burns in the mouth and digestive tract --= a terrible reward for the enterprise of young explorers, { Like other forms of poisoning, poisonings due to laundry bleaches and _cleaning fluids are enormously simple to prevent, "What is requir- ed," says Spectrum, "is minimal education of housewives to keep such commonplace and- dangerous agents out of reach," : FREY CR A RARE i bE SIGE ai |THE PORT PERRY STAR, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 0th, 1068--5 manufacturers rather than a benefit Combines Cinch Top to Baler second, some ee like woollen textiles would be wiped Loop Spot out with a quick rise in unemployment as the upshot, Bowmanville-Orono Combines have cinched first place in the standing of the Lakeshore Intermediate Hockey League, Lindsay Regents are three : points back of the second place Port Wheat wouldn't be affected; there Hope Ontarios but have three games |&re not restrictions at the present left to two for the Ontarios. Coburg |time. Sales of farm products in gen. are assured of the cellar position .as| eral would probably rise slightly and they are five points back of Lindsay. | fish sales might go up to in years there was a bumper catch. Here are some high points from the article's industry-by-industry analysis' of the effect of free trade with Britain * Following is the standing to date: ) a Bowmanville-Orono Base metals, our biggest monmey- Team P W LT Pts. [earner in Britain, aren't under re- Combines 21 17 4 0 84, striction now either, but sales would Ontarios 22 10 11 1 21{go up in the long run as the UK. Regents ©21 -8-11 2 18{ earned more dollars to buy them with. 1 Rockets 22 6. 156 18 Lumber and newprint probably wouldn't be greatly affected. 1 U.K. But heavy electrical machinery manufacturers, textile companies, { basic iron and steel producers, in- 0f Free Trade to a a : B i [dustrial machinery firms, footwear rl alin makers and small manufacturers in TORONTO -- Canadian manufact- general are almost all afraid that urers have been "scared out of al British products would undereut their year's growth" by Britain's offer of | Prices on a more or less wide scale. free trade at last fall"s Common- wealth premiers' Conference, Mac- lean's Ottawa Editor Blair Fraser says in the Magazine's February 1st issue. The time may come, Fraser says, "when we might begin to ask our- selves how much it costs to go on buy ing Canadian goods when the same - thing can be bought more cheaply On the face of it, Fraser reports, | abroad. Those Canadians who do pro- 'the offer sounded like "an answer to | duce cheaply might get tired of pay- Canadian dreams". It meant 60|ing for the support of their compat- million new customers for Canadian |riots who don't", goods, and substantially lower prices to Canadian consumers for a long list of things from woollens and clothing to heavy machinery and baby shoes. When the time comes, the Maclean's article concludes, .some palitical party will take up Britain's offer"of free trade and demand it be accepted. But its reception provided that, for : the time being anyway, Canadians are . more interested in protecting them- u selves as producers than in lowering South Ontario the price we have to pay as consumers. ' No group in the country shope up in Agricultural Soc. favour of the offer, Fraser states: manufacturers were "outraged", the Sh If A Pl government maintained "a pained and e rena " an stony silence", the opposition kept ait, Plans for building a skating arena ) . . combined with a new agricultural The Maclean's article gives two prin-, building in Alexandra Park were cipal reasons for the rejection of abandoned at a meeting of the South Britain's offer. First, low prices for Ontario Agricultural Society Tuesday = | Cars and household appliances would | No Group in Favour probably show sales rise in the It was agreed that the representatives - of many service clubs present should ask their members if they were. inter ested in meeting with the South Ont- ario Agricultural Society to see whether a new agricultural building in the park could be adapted for com- munity use other than an arena. F. A. Lashley, superintendent of the Ontaro Agricultural Societies, said if the Oshawa Fair wgre to survive it would be necessary to erect new build- ings, Substantial government grants were availablé to the South Ontario Agri-. cultural Society which wanted to put up the new building. It was thought that the society might be able to co- operate with the city council or other groups in the city in erecting build- ings which could also be useful for some community purpose. J. Rutherford, present of the Oshawa Junior of Commerce, said during a dis- cussion on what recreating such build- ing would be suitable for: I thought we were going to undertake to build an areua. It seems thatfthese grants would be dependent on the agricultural use of the building." ' Fred Ellegett, chairman of the Parks Board, commented: "The upper- most thought in the minds of the city totay is an arena. "What the city is going to do about it I don't know .. or what the re- action would be if a fund were started. We do know' that Alexandra Park is not the place for an arena." One service club representative added: "It was mentioned that the public would $500,000. about raise have to British goods are seen as a threat to night. AW.BR let's all go shopping for | = BROCK'S AY Have you scen the % big d-page Savage ad in this week's ROTO supplement? It features all the most popular new shoes for children this spring: We have these and many other Savage Shoes now--for boys and girls of all ages, Qur trained stalf knows how to give proper fitting, too. ' ABI See center spread, current issue of "WEEKEND", # DEPARTMENT STORE - -- SAVAGE SHOES "| ONE OF OUR LARGEST SELLING SHOES = CHILDREN'S Soup hoo Suge Oxfords, Straps at oo in Brown . Patent Straps, $4.95 Boys' Oxfords, $4.95 BROWN TO SIZE 3 Baby's White Boots ALL Jo AT REGULAR PRICES "Children's E-Z Sleepers 1'to 3 YEARS ......$1.98 PAIR = Spring Suitings « 74 Spring Si $2.25 Ad EM | | Viscose Mats Nylon & Rayon Blankets FRINGED ENDS (24 x 36) ......... $2.49 SATIN BOUND (72 x 84) ................ $5.95 (24 x45)... en peveeenns " ...52.98 (80 X60) ..oonvrrvnisfinminsremmnsnss sunias $4.95 BRIER ROSE, WOOL : Axminister Mats Congoleum Mats" 0 X OL | AXIO) ie Hard $2.95 and $3.95 OTHER LINES AVAIL- . Phone 43 Port Perry, Ontario 7

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy