fv x thokauy april istk ims the acton pree press paoe thus the ml 8qwl hallo homemakera rome of our readers who with to uu leftovera without following relie have re quested information on standard pro portion and substitutions wa promise to publish this frum urn to time ao if you ar interested clip this umki column may wa thank tt qm who w rota asking for t his guide because wa feel ft should ha useful to many other homeanakers guide to iuopoutions use 4 egg yolks to 1 quart milk for boiled custards use m cup cornstarch to 1 quart milk for blanc mange uca 3 tspa baking powder to 3 rupa 1 pint flour ua 1 up vinegar to each cup uf milk substitute for tour milk use s cup uncooked rice to yield 2 cup rooked rice uaa s cup flour to 1 quart liquid for whila sauces lc uaa 1 tap aalt to 1 quart water for bolting vegetables use s tip pepper to each tip salt substltuta cup lard plus m tap aalt lor 1 cup buttrr substltuta 3 tbp cocoa plus v tbap thortanlng for 1 square choco late substitute 1 cup milk for h cup evaporated milk substitute 4 tip soda and a tapa craam tartar for 1 tap baking po- ler chocolate ctieam rom cake 4 egg whites 4 egg otks 3 tbapa cold water tip salt 1 tap vanilla 1 cup rake flour 1 cup sugar 1 tip lemon juice 3 tips baking pou der add the salt to the egg whites nd beat until foamy add on ratf of the sugar gradually besting to a meringue in which peak wit hand up whan a spoon l lifted from them beat the jolki sllghtlv add the remaining sugar and beat until thick and fluffy add the flavoring and cold water and mix well fold in flour and baking pouder which have baen sifted together tunttle mertngur to one side of the bowl and put the fluffy ello batter beside it then fold the two mixture together carefully pour into shallow tra about 13x16 inches lined lth waxed paper well greased hake in preheated oven at xso degrees t about 10 m inula whan done turn out onto a cheesecloth remove tha waxed paper trim off the edges of tha cake with a sharp knife spread with cream tiling roll and pin tt cloth to hold the roll until cold fiminc 1 cup sugar 3 eggs 1 tbip but ter 7 tbapa cornstarch 2 cups milk 1 tip anllla v tap salt 2 squares chocolate melted sift the dry ingredients together add the well beaten eggs and mix well add the milk gradually to make a smooth paste itlr and cook until thickened and thoroughly rooked re move from the stove add the melted rhoroutramt the butter fceet thor oughly let cool slight tj and add the vanilla supper special 1 pound shell macaroni 2 pounds fresh broccoli drop the shell macaroni tnuo a large quant it of boiling salted water and cook about twenty mlnutaa or until tender drain rinse in cold water and reheat in the meantime prepare the broccoli and cook th boll- trig water until tt is just teriwer xfeatn and cut the italks crosswise in irich lengths reserving the heads for garnish in the serlng bowl place layers of the macaroni alternately with layers of the cut broccoli ar range the heads of the broccoli on f he top accompany with cheese sauce cheese sauce 4 tbapa baking fat h up salt 2 cuna milk 1 onion minced v tsp pepper is cup cheese diced 4 tbspa flour up curr pow der melt lhettanrtnitcwrth onion stir in the flour mixed with tha salt pepper and curry powder add the milk gradually when the mixture is smooth sdtjhe cheese and place the sauce over hot water uftttl the cheese is meted take a to 1 paint the lower step of your cellar or garage stairs with white enamel it may prevent a bad tall as it can be teen in the dark 2 try varnishing your old copper screens to make tham last one more year 3 remove ruit stains produced by plpsbyrubhlngwllh finite dipped in vinegar and salt saint john njb cp largest theft of silk stockings ever reported ktrl involved 4500 pain stolen re cently when a thlefbrokelnto a hold where tha shipment was stored three thousand were recovered shortly alter tha lhart chronicles ol ginger farm j short speeches or none whttsa hgistahy fa tw asia free prase by owkndol1ne p djlatkb yesterday i called at the newly in stalled frigid itxker plant in our near ijy town opening our own locker 1 took out two froien paikage of meat and olk them home they wire all ready for the oven yet we had had no part in the preparatory work of the meat we had neither butchered made the sausage or cured the hams and i thought as i drove home how greatly living ctmdltlons ttsve clanged for nearly all arm eople a hundred years ago or even hft fatm folk prided themsetvee on itielr self auff l trtti on nearly evvry farm butchering w tart of ova winters wuik farm wmen naked their own bread churned their own butter carded their own wool later making it into homespun blank ets ami heavy clothing delivery of goods uaa almost unheard of except for the occasional travelling sales man yet with all he hard vtmk and 1m k of conveniences large families w ere raised and a tough breed of men were left to carry on the old tradltlom now in spite of modem conven iences around the home the majority of farm folk are almost as dependent upon outside help as anyone in the city we pay to have work done which wsi formerly regarded as part of the days work we pay to have our butchering done we store the meat in lockers instead of the old brine barrel we pay for processing and smoking in fart all wa do for ourselves ta cook tre meat and eat it and in regard to other provisions in many dlttruts bread groceries and butter are delivered right to our door and now something else hat crop ped up in our local paiwr i noticed the town council had given permls- aion to iin applicant for the erection of a chl ken kilting plant 1 said to partner what tre idea of that do ou suppose the fellow in tchdi running a plant for cutom killing ma le intw rrcrt partner hut i know onr thing if we cant pit k our own chicken we ii quit rnltltig them well that was partners reaction mainly 1 suppose because the idea was new een at that there might he n time when we shall be only too kind to take advantage of just sue a plant what i am renll driving at li this in thli ngr of specialised jobs when we can have almost every kjpd of work done for us if we wall long enough li the pendulum swlngldg too far the other wa b being leas selfreliant are we progressing or regressing that h the way might be a good subject for a debate certainly while the labor shortage must still be contended with the more onr can get done by outside help the belter and perhaps after the war when home f reeling unlit become a paetf many tortus home butchering will stage a comeback personally not being a descendant of pioneer farming stock i am well con tent to let someone else wrestle with pigs reads sausage making and all the fuss and must that goes with butchering but then i m a lazy far mers wire 1 admire tha skill and hard work that goes into these jobs but i dont want to do them mself no sir after tenttlve vrars of doing my share at prettv nearly everything there li to do on a farm t am all for the eorr spots that is after tre war that is wh i am so glad there is some hope of getting hydro at last however getting the hydro la one thing getting things to work with is something else again has anyone got a washing machine in cold storage if so i would be ery glad to warm it up once a week right now my electrical equipment is limited to an iron and a pair of curling tongs that is about oiy a tmwtth the time wax married when all i had in my hope chest was n pair qf stockings and a meat grlndxr well the weather has turned warm gain and once more we are thinking about spring work last week when it uaa so cold we thought we were hack to winter again one morning i went out and found the daffodil buds absolutely stiff with frost and tha flowers that were in bloom flat on the ground i thought that was tre end of therri to my surprise it wasnt- toejflpwer perkad right up again and the buds are now out in hlnnm tndaywelet th chldcen hy av- dkaciiman a country patr makes the sug gestion tret political speeches ought to be banned from the radio except during elections and certain jpatllc ocraxtons when some alem bracing public issue demands delineation there is wisdom in this but i beg leave to move a mudlflrailon poll i l a speeches over the radio should e fiequent hut short not more than ten minutes all sieecbee in the ilouae of m mans sheuld be short very short preparing short speeches would be hard work for the members but it would induce clear thinking a truly vital necessity short speech would intensify in terest in event instead of having a hansard ef 3000 tages which no one ever reads we should have a nice handy volume of about xw lgea whlth might become a leet seller lm all far the short speech the short aee- alon and a hansard mora or lea km ket size now how can we bring hit aout tne people must be made aware of the fart that quite often the alue of a speech is in inverse ratio to 1u volume every possibly encourage ment should ha given to the man who can slate a good case in a few words why not a national campaign in favor of making tha canadian people including the members of larllament famous for tre wisdom and brevity of heir remarks hut right here i have sinned again st my own gods there are two hundred and eightyfive worda in this tory it should have been don n a hundred it took two mlnutaa to read it t might have save a minute of reading time if only i had cut it in two rewrite it in 100 words and aee how much better it becomes easy for gossip tor becomes a disease writing jn an amusing style but with serious intent ml eras i dury suggests that just for the fun of it go over the last eight hour remem- har to whom jou talked and about w hom isnt there something you wish you could ake back something oud rather not have said at home ws have a favorite saying when criticism of friends or bits of goswlp tend to creep into the conver sation if you really rant say any thing good alwut a peron dont say anything at all sometimes tre children protest half humorously half indignantly flut we werent say ing anything mean really it was just in fun hut not good clean fun nevertheless and it i very easy for rrltulam to become a habit in the nung and fur the seeming ly harmless to become an insidious disease mr dury says for instance crtt iclsm la ninetenths gossip and vice versa there is no auch thing as harmless gossip ity definition gossip aorordlng to webster is idle petty groundless tumor or scandal accom panied hy what wetuter calls a run ning about these are not harmless wortu dont try to make yourself tellrve they are sister of the harm- leas gossip at hool is tha constructive rltlclsm one you can teat your- aetf on that by this rule it your crit icism spoken directly to the jteraon or persons offending and ate you in the same breath explaining how to mend the trait misdemeanor or what ever it is then and only then is it constructive gossip and criticism drain off more valuable time than it is comfortable to contemplate and have you ever noticed that tin very things you criticise in others are often in time revealed in yourself as lo gossip even if the story re- la led to you true isnt it better not to repeat it that la probably the best medicine for the disease call ed gossip family herald and week ly star no woujho atvonki 8t thomas ool cpwo roll ing stone u wellington wesley staw- art who recently started hi cist year on the same job in tha bark shop of the st thomas times jour nal beginning january ilia he has served ever since as a printer and proofreader first on the st tromas times then on 1u successor the timesjournal soviet stuntuu have develsfsrl h paste of praesed milk which u afisi ttve in curing wounds la waeaal- brisk hospital wart several mess whew wound healed very slowly toeltv blorkbig ultra violet ray treat mist antlaeptlca and permangaaat bath not proving much value cthja tpmaal milk paste was applied and fhe wouasv ed were toon well again during the lining red blockade this paste wej used tn alt thetenlngrad thj quality guaranteed waliaua tea french underground at hijc vera ijndsay right war corresndent and producer of the bbc radio newsreel heard over lit i1iic rtananada network nightly at 1100 pm is shown with three young kreni hwoman former members of the french undergound movement on a recent visit to the bbc in i on don pie girls went to kngland to give lec tures on trelr experience under erman oc upatlon this story 15 lattd on an actual case mfii out for tha first time and what a ttine they re having i am very pleased with my little we pullets ao pleased that i dont think i shall aver want mixed chickens again they eat leas grow faster and do better in ovary way wjten they are free from being oocsad around by gready little cock erel brother j ohn haley retired farmer was tiltinr to his ion who was now running the farm ye ronnie they were touh yi in but that was before vou were hom your mother ind i vme here kuk 7n 1900 all we had wis this vjmre mik of hnj with a ahaik a rannhuklc kirn and a hit of fcne oh e and a mortarc anj w haj to haul watcf two miles and drive twenty to market gosh did it must hive been mighty hird dcdding guess 1 have a cinch todiy i 11 said the old mm it would have- tven a eight harder sledding it that young m inager of the rank of montreal hajnt stuck by me there were some years when i had bad luck with my little herd and the crops were poor when id hae just gone under if he hadnt givenjne a hand funny you know he always used to jay i was a good credit risk because i used to haggle with the people i bought cattle from and when i waptcd a loon to buy feed i almost always ttked the bank to advance money for int pirt of the tun anvwav good rnk or tn thi mink stiuk b me and if it werent for that vu winildii i iv running this mqarc farm tudav and gcttipg firm prtit tt r your avrnrc and what more dmg a ij war job jills rue expennue u tspujl af thouand of customers relitii m uiti hr rant of fontreal the john mules et nnin ufe hvtjiur oj their deterrmndtiim entftpmr and e reluinic u is thev uho haie nutdc carunlj uhjtihe u toiliv the third greatest trujmg natnm of the u orlj if you need a loan for the better operation of your farm or for assistance m your personal affair we ill be glad of the opportunity to disci in confidrncr your plans and problems with you bank of montreal ttiaiiuixiiiiiili b m umf villi c t l mwrjr inm lilt limit 1817 acton branch w h cxavton manager i tct-