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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 25 Jun 1942, p. 4

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- -~ -- - -.----------~. .-~- -- TH-URSDAY, JUNE 25j~ 1942 THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, ONTARIO THE MIXING BOWL Sy ANNE ALLAN Hydre Home Economlmt *1 ( j .1 Planning For 'Army Week" cornstarch: 1/2 cup brown sugar; H ello Homemakers! To-day 1 tsp. butter. ~e r makng pansto hnourour Line a pie plate with crust and we'r maingplas t hoourourbrus h wilh white cf an egg. Add Canadian Army during Army bernies and sprinkle with the 1eek. June 29th to July 5th has sugar and cornstarch mixed to- been set aside for us to learn all gether. Dot with butter: cover &bout the work and activities of with upper crust and bake in eur Army and something special electric oven at 425 for 10 mins., has been arranged for us each then at 350' for 30 mins. day. Every homemaker can co- Honey Nut Squares operate in paying tribute to thelu up or;1 u hny Armny during this period. I1cpsfor;1 uphny We uggst ha hoema&5 3 tbs. brown sugar; 2 egg Wsay it t w t ommke whites; 1-3 cup butter; 1 cup usayit ithflowers" by decorat- cocoanut; 12_ cup browvn sugar; ig the house with garden flowers ', cup waînuts; 4tP at ---and outside the Flag can be un- 2 14lor:% tsp. saît; 3. !urled and waved on high to show Rub the first three ingredients your spirits will neyer die. Do boeter to make a crumb mix- plan your household duties s0 toge.t it hlo a n thd can visitneafrbey camps aincook in a moderate oven about 10 and fam iysete parads and mins. Beat egg white stiff, add the aeiny e the ntranesndo honey and brown sugar gradually; Wha ente trtimto beat 'until mixture peaks; f old in Army ek other ingredients. Spread this On Monday, June 29th, Soldier over cruffib mixture and cook 40 Day may be honoured by inviting mins. in electric oven at 325'. men or women in khaki to your Take a Tip home to enjoy a real, hot, home- cooked meal-or sending an extra Serve Army Rations on Tuesday special parcel Overseas. And ac- Breakfast eording to the order of the day, Orange Rolled Wheat Fresh Milk Tuesday we will serve army ra- Scrambled Eggs Toast tions. Try to reserve the whole Butter Jam Coffee week to be consistent with the Dinner training of the Army. This is the time for us all to get behind the Beef Broth with Rice Baked Ham Am-oshow everyone that we Scalloped Potatoes army-rtn t n odo t. Buttered Cabbage ar spprtngitan pou c i. Bread Butter Speciai So1dier's Dinner Cottage Pudding wîth Jam Sauce Chilled Fruit Juice Roast Chicken Tea or Milk Giblet Gravy Sage Dressing Supper New Potatoes Spinach - Beef Broth with Rice Radishes Cucumber Slices CheeadPtt'aa Maple Leaf Salad Bowl Pcked ese d ts SAlsauc Cafe au Lait PMlassBes CookiesuTea Suggestions for Overseas Box MThses Ques eBo Molasses Pound Cake M The .QC.ssi"o Bo tac Honey Nut Squares r.SC.ak:"oyusrc Crown Oatmeal Cookies pillow ticking to prevent feathers Molasses Pound Cake comîng through?" Answer: If feathers work thro' 2-3 cup butter; 1 tsp. cinnarnon; a tick. remove them and turn the ¾ý cup sugar: ½ , tsp. alîspice; tick inside out. Rub the inside 2 eggs, beaten; 1., tsp. clove; with beeswax sligbtly warmed. 1 2-3 cup milk; Y4 tsp. mace; 2-3 Put in the feathers and sew up. cup molasses; %~ cup seeded Mrs. C. P. T, says: '"I received a raisins: 248 cups flour; 1-3 cup humn when opening a tin can of citron, thinly sliced; ¾i tsp. soda. food heated in the oven-what Cream butter, add sugar gradu- happened?" ally, eggs, milk and molasses. Mix Answer: Always put two small and sîft 2 cups flour with soda boles in the top) cf tin and heat in and spices; add to first mixture; a van with a ittle water in it. add fruit dredged with 2 tbs. Miss M. B. asks: "~What will re- fleur. Bake in electric oven at move indelible ink?" 350'. Answer: Equal parts of am- Mother's Blackberry Pie monia and turpentine-then rinse 2% cups blackberries; 1 tsp. thoroughly. Anne Allan invites you to write te ber c1o The Statesman. Send in your questions on homemaking problems and watch this column for replies. When you try that army menu during Army Week you are cer- tain to find the meals wholesome. No community is toc large or too small to celebrate Army Week. Many of the major events of Army Week at Ottawa are on broadcast schedules. Watch for them. They are sure to be in- teresting. Il1 MAKE SUMPLY DELICIOUS BRAN MU FFINSj THIS POOR fellow gambled with Pire- and lost. Now he knows tragically the vital need of sufficient dependable insurance. Don 't stake ail you ow~n against the chance of being wiped out by Pire. Keep up your fixe insurance -and don 't forget to increase the amount to cover ail those new large purchases you 've made recently. J. Je MASON & SON .INSURANCE AGENTS phone 681 Bowmanville DON'T BE SQUIRRELLY! Cartoon-Çourtesy Jack Boothe, The Vancouver Province. The Ring and Queen Send Cable! To Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Peikins Congratulations Extended To For- land, coming to Canada as a youth mer Durham County Venerable of seventeen. Mrs. Perkins, for- Couple on Their 66th Wedding merly Mary Moffat, is in ber 87th Anniversary year; she was born at Orono. In ________1876 the young couple were mar- (Teeswater News) ried at Bowmanville, and shortly Despîte strenucus duties as war- afterwards moved te Howick time rulers. Their Majesties, The Township. There they farmed for King and Queen, have net for- a number cf years, later moving gotten loyal British subjects, and te Belmore where Mr. Perkins proof cf this was quite evident in operated a sawmill until coming a cablegram received by Mr. and te Teeswater in 1893. They have Mrs. H. R. Perkins cf Teeswater. resided here ever since. Dated May 3lst, 1942, from Buck- Mrs. Perkins is in excellent ingham Palace, Eng., the cable bealtb and carnies on ber own reads. bousehold duties in as competent "~Mr. and Mrs. Pekins- a manner as many women baîf The King and Queen send you ber age. Mr. Perkins is not just bearty congratulations and good in the best of healtb, but takes a wisbes on the 66th anniversary keen interest in the activities of of your wedding day. this community, and bas not lest -Private Secretary." one whit cf bis keen sense of To say that Mr. and Mrs. Per- humer. An insight into the char- kins were pleased would indeed acter cf a real man is gleaned be a mild statement. Tbey were, from this statement Mr. Penkins in the most plain terms, "tickled made the other day when the edi- te deatb." ton paid hlm a visit: "We've had The elderly couple observed the a lot of neighbons in our day, but 66th anniversary on Sunday, May we neyer had a poor one!" Slst, and many were the mes- To Mr. and Mrs. Perkins on Lsages cf congratulations and feli- thein sixty-sixth wedding anni- citations extended by friends and î-ersary the community as a whole neigbbors. adds their voice te that cf the 7 Mr. Perkins, wbo is in bis 88th King and Queen in extending con- year, was born in Plymouth, Eng- gratulation and best wishes. Hery Wightman, Valedictoxian Honoxed at Cornwall Collegiate It's hard to believe that Henry Five years ago we entered this Wightman, son of Major H. D. school with an awed feeling. We Wightman, formnerly of The were first formers and while we Statesman staff, who only a few had feit important on our entrance years ago attended Bowmanville to the school we were soon hum- Public Sehool,' is among the grad- bled by seniors who passed re-1 uating class at Cornwall Colle- marks such as "They are gettingt giate. Furthermore, Henry had younger every year." the honor of being selected by the When we reached the haughty1 Principal to write the Valedictory stage of a third former we feitJ for his class, which very excellent that we had the world at our feet1 article was published in the Daily and that we knew as much if not Freeholder Standard and which more than the teachers. we reproduce herewith: Now as we leave the school we It is flot an easy task for a stu- are beginning to realize how little dent in his graduating year to per- we know and somehow wish that sent a valedictory address in these we could start over again. We times. When we started to colleg- see, looking back, how mnuch we iate five years ago we had no have missed in flot working as thoughts of invasion, black-outs hard as we might have either at and bombings were unheard of. school work or extra curricular Canada had just undergone a dif activities. f icult depression but the prospects Due to the war, many of us of the boys just starting high have lost friends and brothers school were very bright. overseas. Sometimes it is hard to No one knows when we will be believe that boys who were sit- free of Hitler and his menace to ting beside us in class two years democracy. Since we entered the ago, who were the leaders of the portais of this educatioflal insti- school in both classwork and tute we are at least f ive years old- sports have lost their lives in the er. Tbey have been the most im- service of their country. QUiers portant years in our lives. The are taking their lives in their time in which we received the hands every night flying over training for our future lives has enemy territory. slipped by. When we started col- It is impossible to describe the legiate we were still children, feeling which most of us exper- now as young men and women we jence when one of the boys cornes leave the school, some of us to en into the room and tells us of an- ter the services of the King, oth- other casualty. ers to go on to higher courses of It is a very sobering thought learning and still others to start when one realizes that most of the out to make a place for ourselves boys in our class have either join- amnong men. ed the services or will have joined It falis to our lot to remake the _______________ world and fashion a better place in which to live. We have no bright future in front of us now. We have only hard work e We have had fine training for this job however. Our teachers have been an inspiration to us While we have not always agreed with themn or with our principal in t y , the decisions they have made, we usually find that very sound ad- vice has been meted out. There is far more to be had in school than the memnorizatiofi of a Latin declension or a Pythagorean relation. We have had training in learning how to take it, being a gracious winner or g good loser, as the case rnay be. The interest that our teachers show in their work and in us has been excellent training. It has flot been an easy task for an instruc- tor in Latin to create an interest in the minds of the students of that subject. but what we will re background of Latin and the Ro- *NS * PS manwayoflife rather than the IARNKS POSDROFFICS Latin Janguage, we will remember iAR * T S OUACCONUGISTS more of the phi]osophy of the ROgeaiS ud.éo TACOSTS Romans than we will of the con- M TR da"RTI OE jugations of latin verbs. ou- 261 PAGE FOUR PLACE No one can take your place, dear one, And love me same as you; Nor understand my whims and ways The same as you can do. No one can share my joys and hopes, No one my sorrows bear; No one can understand like you, And few there are who care. No one when troubles come to me, Can ease the pain they bring Like you, whose sympathy and care Relieve their ceaseless sting. No one has smiles like your smîles are, When I am aIl cast down; You shed new light when dark- ness comes, You, neyer knew a frown. No one to me is just like you, None has the slightest trace 0f your sweet self, so in my life No one can take your place. -RALPH GORDON. 628 Crawford St., Toronto. Obituary Mrs. J. B. Mitchell On Friday, June 12tb, Helena Marion MacLean Mitchell died at Bowmanville Hospital after a short illness. Mrs. Mitchell, who was predeceased by her husband, the late John Bernard Mitchell, one time Mayor of Bowmanville and Superintendent of the Do- minion Organ & Piano Co. for many years. had spent her whole life in the town and was one of lits most esteemed and highly re- spected citizens. Mrs. Mitchell was in her 85th year, having been born in Bow- manville on May 2lst, 1858, the daughter of the late Joseph and Marion Odell MacLean. She is survived by two sons, F. J. Mit- chell of Bowmanville, and R. M. Mitchell of Belleville. One gxr%1d- son. Lieut. Murray Mitchell of Belleville, is with the Canadian Armoured 'Forces, Overseas; an- other grandson, Kenneth Mit- chell, lives in Toronto. An- other grandson, Bernard Mitchell of St. Catharines, died quite sud- denly in March of this year. Mrs. Mitchell was a member of The tChurch of Christ, otherwise 1known as The Disciples Church, and was well 'known for her faithful and zealous co-operatiofi tin connection with ber church 1and ber devotion to ber family. f The funeral, which was private, twas held from the home of her fson, F. J. Mitchell, Church Street, on June lSth. Rev. Frederick Joblin, St. Paul's United Church, s was the officiating minister. Paîl- bearers were T. H. Knight, Clin- ton Luniney, Fred Preston, Alex tLyle, Percy Corbett and Geo. W. James. Friends from a distance included Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mitchell, Mrs. H. Gilbert, Mr. and "Mrs. Wilfred Rice, and Mrs. Cool- " idge, Toronto. and Mrs. D. E. Sin- -clair, Lindsay. ELLIOTT M. LITTLE, Diroctor National Selective Service Minister of Labour Every time a voluntary system Soldiers in the Canadian Army Visual training helps soldiers fails it's as much a defeat for are protected against foot trouble appreciate the formation of hUiS democracy as the faîl of Frne by regular foot inspecto bfr and valleys as an aid to oç- Hong Kong, Bataan or Singapre and after each route mrh ment. -, r A6. CANADA N A TION A L S EL EC TIVE SE R VIC E CONTROL 0F EMPLOYMENT NO EMPLOYER HEREAPTER BHALI. HIRE ANY PERUON, MALE Fi EMALE, WITHOUT THE APPRO VAL 0F A SELECTIVE* * SERVICE OFFrICER IN AN EMPLoyMdENT OFFICE Or THE UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE COMMISSION .Whenever a vacancy occurs, or additional staff is required, or a lay-off of staff is anticipated, the employer shail notily the local Employnft Office. He may engage only persons referred to hiin by, or approved by, the local Employment Office. A local Selective Service Officer may revoke at any time, on flot less than ton days notice, any approval granted by him. Appeal from a Selective Service Officer's decision may b. made in writi.ng within ton days to the Divisional Registrar of the National War Services Board, and the decision of the Board shail be final. EXCEPTIONS This order doos not include employment: (1) lI agriculture, fishing, hunting or trapping; (2) Subject to the Essential Work (Scientific and Technical Personnel) Regulations, 1942; (3) lI domestic service in a privato home; (4) 0f students after school hours or duxi.ng holidays (but does include employmerit during Sum.mer Vacations); (5) In part-turne work which is not the principal means of livelihood; (6) Casual or irregular employment for not more than three days ini any calendar week for the saine employer; (7) Under the Govern- ment of any Province. This order doos not affect Re-empîcyment: (1) Within not more than 14 consecutive days after the last day a person worked for the same employer; (2) After sickness or disability which caused the suspension of the employment, (3) On resumption of work after a stoppage caused by an industrial dispute; (4) lI accordance with a collective labour agreement which provides for prefer- ence according to length of service or seniority; (5) On compulsory re-instate- ment after Military Service. Until further notice from the Director of National Selective Service or a local National Selective Service Officer, any employer may iemporarily engage any employee, if ho subinits within thxee days to a local office an application in dupli- cate for the approval of such engagement. Such application shail state the insurance book number, or the insurance registration nu.xber, (U.I.C. Forin 413), naine, address, age, sex, occupation of sucli employee, the name of bis or lier most recent employer, and the date ho or she left employment with such employer. Penalties for infringements of this order provide for a fine up to $500.00, or imprisoxnent up to 12 months, or both fine and imprisoninent. Thi.s order supeMsedes previous National Selective Service Orders* *resp.cting r.stricted and unrestiicted occupations. mmýý 1 1.ý di. Lý -.L- .. 1 .&ý . - - - . - 1

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