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Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), June 1, 1938, p. 3

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the georgetown herald wednesday evening june 1st 1938 page 3 1kb modebn electuc bangb kltv at the kitchen by sybil oayford rhlnd we hometnakers are in and out of our kitchens most of the day and of ten more in than out in reality the kitchen is womans kingdom we owe it to ourselves to make sure they are as efficiently equlprfcd as our hus- bands offices the secret of successful homemak- tag is to get the best of our job in stead of it getting the best of us and that is where electricity plays such a big part meals must be prepared three times a day out the wonderful electric ranges now on the market nave turned this duty into a delight it is really quite thrilling what the uptodate electric stove is able to do my dear exclaimed a friend the ofher day since i bought my new el ectric range i feel as if my fairy god mother- had waved her magic wand over me i have so much more time to m h i can hardly belie iitand tin not nearly so tired at us end of the day this remark is easily understood by anyone accustomed to the joys of cooking by electricity because the new stoves do so much for us that formerly we had to do ourselves now- adays there is no waiting around till the oven reaches a certain heat before lowering it because automatic control looks after temperatures electricity certainly does away with the bugbear of washing up no more scouring the outstdes of a lot of dirty pots and pans because electric heat is a clean heat with no flame also controlled heat preve food boilin over in the oven or sticking to the bottom of saucepans often an entire meal can be cooked in the oven leav in fe pans to wash th get the meal ready but dont ask me to do the clearing upl is an expression never heard in the home of electricallyminded modern people the economy of the new electric ranges must not be overlooked it is a tremendous asset to the lessening of mr budgets figures it has been proved by actual tests that the aver age cost of a meal cooked m a mod em stove is less than one cent a meal per person there is also a very definite saving through reducing shrinkage of meat doing away with cooking failures and eliminating waste of food values it is a very common mistake i this country but one never made by those excellent cooks the french people that expensive cuts of meat taste the best and are the most nut ritious this is an entirely erroneous idea many of the cheaper vuts en long slow cooking to make them tender are perfectly aeucious and contain just as much actual food val ue as the most expensive joint a sustained low temperature oer fectly controlled is one of the many ways in which the modern e stove excells obis perfectly control led low beat is the answer to the pro blem of cooking the less expensive cuts of meat and having them as de liciously tender as the best undercut steak for an example of this type of cooking the following idea is a good one 4 medium slse shoulder yearling lamb chops cut 1 inch thick 1 medium size tin tomato juice 1 cup cold water bacon fat flour salt and pepper parsley method trim off chops neatly shoulder chops are considerably chea per than loin ones dredge with flour lightly grease pan with bacon fat heat brown chops slightly on both sides then put them in covered bak ing dish pour over meat the tomato juice diluted with the water season to taste cover with tight lid set oven for a sustained heat of 250 deg rees and cook slowly for two hours to two and a quarter hours depending on the size of the chops arrange meat on the hot platter sprinkle lightly with chopped parsley remove any fat from tomato juice gravy and erve in gravy boat riced potatoes and buttered carrots or spinach make a nice accompaniment to this dish amount given serves four generously if more chops are required don t lor get to increase the tomato juice and water thinking of electric stoves a post was seen in london england recent ly advertising all the wonderful things electricity does now adays it read dont kill you wife with work let electricity do itl home town we dont know who ruth earle jones is from a load of hay but the following she wrote in the augusta georgia dally paper shows her head screwed on straight real towns arent made by men afraid lest someone gets ahead when everyone works and no one you can raise a town from the dead all little towns are the same so if there is anything about the one you are living la that displeases you it wont do you a bit of good to slip and take a trip elsewhere you would find the same thing you left behind only under a different name when you stop to think of it there is really nothing new anywhere and life goes on just the same in the new town as it did in the old people have the same joys and sottowb and make the same mistakes everywhere they are m rled have children and die the ageold cycle of llle continues genera tion after generation and even u we sometimes stop and wonder if h is worth while to keep going round and round like a monkey in a cage we wont have time to stop and do anything about it if you get peeved at your home town hate all your neighbors and feel that the place is going to the eternal bowwows it would be far wiser to visit a doctor than to change towns in practically every case the trouble is not with the town but with you when you knock the place that la home to youiltisreally a- knock at yourself because if the place falls to measure up it is your fault as well as your neighbors you have got put something into cnat town a big part of yourself energy enthusiasm progresslveness youve got to be a substantial constructive citizen before you can expect the home town to be the kind of a town youd like it to be a town car only grow men when the cooperation of the people gives it the needed impetus if you don t like the people in your home town well maybe they dont like you either and its more than likely that its your own fault per haps you are not exacting too easy to find fault and too desirous of everyone living their lives according to your own design you have to be generous and understanding when you judge your neighbors and make allow ance for that difference of opinion that is every man s right you ve got to say i think this way you think that way but whats the dif ferenc we both mean well and every man has a right to his own iplnion it is not your opinion that will rule the home town but your opinion plus the other fellows com dined for the common good no there isnt any difference lr towns except their names and al human beings are lhe same it fol lows that if all women are sisters under the skin then ail men are cer talnly brothers under their whiskers so why snap those you know for those you dont of course you love our home town and you only think you don t because you have marlaria or spring fever or maybe a chronic grouch if you don t believe it then go away on a trip when you come back you will grab your bitterest enemy by the hand and say gee i missed you old man you re a swell guy and i had to go away to find it out you might even write a letter to a friend in anoher town and say there is no difference except in the name my town and your town they re both the same shipment of baby chicks in a com mercial way is a development of the last 25 or 30 years being even more recent than the introduction of the automobile it was made possible by the discovery that the chick in com mon with some other birds takes into its body just before it is hatched a supply of food sufficient to nourish it for a week or more the scientific world has always stood in awe of the wonderful provision of nature wbere- bv there is included in an egg all of the elements required to grow and bring into being an organism of as high an order as the baby chick with the simple addition of appropriate heat it required however the knowledge of the availability df a natural food supply to make possible the present- day baby chick business chicks are now shipped as far distant as 1 000 miles from the point of hatching with out the necessity of feeding or water ing all that is needed is that they be given sufficient ventilation and boxed hi such a manner that then- own heat can be preserved and also provision made for supplying the nec essary warmth this shipment of chicks is in reality one of the present day marvels in modem scientific a- chlevement and is one of the many advances that have taken place in ag riculture in recent years one of the first persons in north america to make commercial ship ments of baby chicks was a canadian the veteran poultryman w h fisher of ayton ontario the orig inal chick box used in the first ship ment is prized almost as a museum piece by the people of that town from small beginnings the trade in chicks has grown until today on the continent of north america over 100 000 000 baby chicks are distributed annually of this number canada accounts for about 12000 000 the development of the baby chick industry in which baby chicks are available in any quantity on any date provides the medium for the develop ment of quality to meet the needs of market through the fact that in the selection of breeding stock from which hatching eggs are supplied the proper market type and requirements an constantly to the fore this is pos sible owing to the fact that a compar atively limited number of breeding flocks supply the bulk of the eggs re quired for incubation in the larger hatcheries six out of the nine prov luces are cooperating with the dom inlon department of agriculture in a flock approval and hatchery approv al policy in which definite grades of chicks have been established to assist the producer buyer in his purchases the other provinces operate under a voluntary and flock approval policy he was afraid to cross ajstreet lost his nerve after 12 months agony suffering from acute rheumatism i both his knee joints treated in hospital twice without result so unnerved that he was afraid to cross a street how readily every rheumatic sufferer will sympathise with this man read what he says for 12 motnhs i suffered pain and misery with acute rheumatism in both my knees twice x was treated in hospital but it was no use i could not walk up or down stairs i was afraid to cross the street for i had lost all confidence in myself fourteen days ago t started taking kruschen salts and already i am a new man i can walk with a smart step jjo up and downstairs with ease and cross the stseefc wlth-cprnplete- confidence my rheumatism is getting better every day ol in a good many cases rheumatism cannot resist the action of kruschen salts which dissolve the painful cryj stals of uric- acid often the cause of those aches and pains and assist the kidneys to eliminate this poison through the natural channels m business summary the following is a brief summary of information received by the bank of montreal from its branches throughout ontario the volume of wholesale and re tall trade has shown moderate lm provement but turnover continues below that of a year ago collections are fair steel and iron output is be ing well maintained farm lmple ment manufacturers remain quiet and there has been a slight pickup in the automobile industry due largely to improved export demand heavy engineering firms are generally well occupied manufacturers of refriger ators are fully employed but some curtailment is noted in the production of other electrical appliances and e- qulpment furniture factories report a slight betterment over march but the industry is generally on short time textile woollen and worsted mills remain quiet knitting mills are only fairly active while hosiery plants are very busy leather tanners while still on reduced scnedules report some briprovement as is the case with shoe manufacturers electric power con abruption continues to exceed that of year ago gold production for march totalled 228183 ounces 7988 370 as compared with 208328 ounces m march 1037 production of silver was 38 744 ounces against 61 742 oun ces a year ago jackson did you hear about the accident my brother had he fell against the piano and hit his head r johnson thats too bad did he hurt himself jackson oh no not much you ee he hit ow soft pedal building costs at 1918 level construction costs are at present 12 per cent lower than 1926 and ex actly equal to costs which prevailed in 1918 according to c d harrington montreal chairman canadian con structlon association who addressed the management committee at ot tawa last week he added the only difference was that sales and municipal taxes wen added which were noexistent in 1918 actually excluding taxes today s costs are cheaper than in 1918 ii building costs are too high why art all our brick companies and wood working sub contractors in financial difficulties extension of the dominion hous lrw act to the rural com muni tips in british columbia wns requested b a british columbia member who sug bested that the act at present was corfined to the larger urban centres in his province bananas golden rllow firm ripe tomatoes 20c lb houio deuci flavor potatoes 5 pounds fw n1 l y c oranges valencia full of juice nice size 19 edoz cabbage 4c lb firm green heads pineapples 19c cuban medium large full flavoi wax beans is 19c special sale new carrots cucumbers etc carrolls 11 magazines on ban list revenue minister ilsey today an nounced 11 magazines had been ban ned from canada importation into canada of the fol lowing magazines will be prohibited romantic detective actual de tective stories of women in crime official detective stories front page detective and weird tales polo true health and effic iency true confessions and ro mantic love secrets vivre d- abord some of these publications were complained of by a delegation of church and social workers which met several members of the cabinet re cently mr ilsey said today that the de partment welcomed cooperation and invited organizations and citizens to submit to the department for exam lnatlon any magazine or publication of doubtful character of the eleven publications prohlb ited nine are published in the united states one in england and one in france elderly lady to her granddaugh ter im afraid joull be late at the party girl oh dear grandma don t you know that in a fashionable set no body goes to a party until eerbody has got there sambo do you want me to shoo the flics in here lor jou mr crabber no let em run around in their bare leet the best place to eat in georgetown only the choicest food served private dining room for family dinners parties or banquets neosqns- cr m h harry chu topleter phone 2 brook block main st south george to w n millinery all the latest in uptodate millinery see our exceptionally fine showing hats from 100 misses claridge main street georgetown herald block upstairs advertise in the herald it pays quality first economy always i piud s date s 2 lbs 19c aytmt rd du i c he r r i e s 2 n j oo j a m k pt io 3c m pod d jellies 9c co mccormicl butt sli sut bars 2 25c fl el special choice f h v r4wus 3 19ckw d e laing chocolate pcppctmrnt patties ib 19c e1 th bl p blueberries 11c 16 o ilr 17c evaporated milk 16- i 8c all branis i3 19c oui b1 o mom coffee ib 25c our dand tea t pl9 41c fnih rolld oats 3 lb 13c d ft frvs jjj cocoa y food silni crest rod salmon 2 25c clo li pink salmon j 11c ingcnoll malted cheese x 14c aylmai tonaalo juice 3 o i- 25c a port nd beans 3 1 oi tint 25c aylmt tomato o v ituwi soup i0 oi n 7c g p apples n 4 ttn 10c lvfca- cor starch 9c jstjsa fp he hjp h out vswsstm lylmfr chopped foods k7usp1es 2 p 21c evaporated apricots 25c bwr ontano peaches 2 t 25c catlh i cooked spaghetti nr 15c 7 ivory soap lt lux flakes l pk 83c soap chips 3lb bo 19c corn brooms c 27c ho ammonia pk 5c p g or pearl soap 5 bn 16c bon ton tissue 4 roll 13c kirk s castile 2 ck 9c funuonl tomatoes 3 no sttm 25c onto vll peas 3ii- 25c avlnwt goun banlaai corn 3 17 o ti- 25c lack can wai beans 3 t- 25c ft tmm wnk ova lti ne 16 oi tm 98c save 24i moal main tree georgetown free delivery phone 3st

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