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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 19 Oct 1950, p. 9

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~TJItSDA'Y, OCTOBER 19. 1950 THE CAKADIAK ~TATESMA2~, BOWMMrVTLLE. ONTAB!O PAGE ~moe Hello Homemakers! Let us talk et the "'cabbage and his ceusinis." The cabbage has numereus rela- tives which include Brussels sProuts, cauliflower, chinese cab- bage and broccoli. These tresh O n'egetables cari be used te great %4dvantage now. The camried anid root vegetables will have their iP1ace later an. The grecen members ot the cab- bage family rate highest in food value. The greener a leafy vege- table the more Vitamin A, cal- cium and iron it is likehy ta sup- ply. SUGGESTIONS 1. Brusseis sprouts are best when thc auter leaves are ail green and look fresh and f irm. One Quart et sprot'- shotild serve five or six peo ple. 2. To cook sprauts remave any blemished outer leaves and soak 10 minutes in salted wa- ter. Drain and cook in boilirug salted water tor 15 ta 2b min- utes or just until tender. Neyer overcoak until sprouts are ug- lv brown. heado buy cauliflower select To ds that are dlean and white, tirm and compact, and heavy for their size. If yau sce cauliflower with brown spots and tiarets that are sep- arated it may be a poor bar- gzain at amy prince. 4. When cauiifhower florets are broken inte very small sec- tlans, crisped and served inl saiads vou do mot waste the valuable Vitamin C content. Let it stanid in coid salty water if pieces faste "strong." 5. As a hof vegetable bail cauli- fiawer onlv until tender (ab- out 18 mins.): turri infa serv- Courteous, Dependable 24 Heur Service STAR ing dish then spnînkle with cheese or peur creamn tomate sauce aven it. 6. Chlnese cabbage is usualiy regarded as a salad vegetable but it is delicieus cooked tee. Wash thonoughiy. sice if cross- xise anid cook in boilirig salted waten until tender (about 12 mins.). Drain anid add 1 cup cooked tematees and hait a minced onien and put it back ta caok for 8 minutes. 7. Shred Chinese cabbage and toss together with equal quan- tities ef grated carnet and izrated turnip. Marinate with French dressing. Sprinkle a feaspoan of brown sugan aven a three-cup mixture and add a few chapped riuts, then serve. 8. When buying broccoli laok for large heads-at heast three inches in diameter. compact and green. The yeilow flow- ers indicate less flaveur and faad value. Two bunches shauld serve six people. By the way, the stemis are veny gond. 9. To prepare broccoli, wash, then slice the stems lemgth- wise leavirig tuft otfhowers on each suice. Place pieces in a smalh amount etf'boiling wa- fer. heads un. Caver amd caok 20 mins. Drain. Peur hat butter aven pieces in serving dlish. h0. Red Cabbage should be crisp and weii-raunded ta be good. Shred a small quamtity ta mix xith white cabbage in sahad. Wrap the unused cabbagc in Plumnium foil. 11. Aiways caok anc or twe very fart appieq with red cabbage ta netain the caleun. On a gem- ranUSsosrinkiingetofleman Ail Passengers Fully Insured TAXI Phone 3324 OPERATÉ D BY EDGAR N. TOMLINSON 85 King Street E., Bowmanville Opposite Sheppard and Gili '1 s The aourishing glas, of froni Grandma ia the happy to thias@tory. Ih tarted Nature put aluminum in the itmelf. That j, why thia tmpo minerai isright in the mlk me( enIn Ihe e Iat Iotn !~ drn 2.4nd Nature gave aluminum <ualities3 that niake it ideal in contact wth food. 5!any milk pails ...many parts of modern milking machines are made of alunimnnm. country---Cit--..-------------- - -f - - are prtectin-m- - - - - ta r ou farm tasudure...frn . tAsmsta sepsitv ail anfottia. Cflflr!taeINo.. o, he aei sm ore "food k are potctoneey" wt Caddaanxlktan nalingIv I han g alyumiu fo tpa caruedinaluinum on te tideofa foodumasoreslanlns b recli ourinkd pure tah"mie ia m"o t senstiv faUfoy Nooterinteia i orje <'fofrely" aiuninm ntuaid of ainfoodsora er drnk ter'sa "in.sîe storvan" of p tef Thom protectcd areavor, uai andpui. ALMIUMCOst Y FanNAD -ALTMd . juice at serving tirne makes a better celour in cooked red ca4,bage. TUE QUESTION BOX Mlisa M. W. asks for a good pickle recipe using green toma- tees? Answer: Chow Chow 30 medium green tomatoes (73/2 lbs.) 1/z cup table (bag> sait or 3/4 cup coarse sait 1/z mediumi cabbage (3 cups minced) 3 green peppers 2 sweet red peppers 3 medium onions 6 l cups vinegar 2 cups sugar 1 tablespeon celery seed 1 tablespoon mustard seed %k tablespoon whole cloves Put tomatees through food chopper, uslng coarse b i a d e. Combine with sait anid let stand' %k heur. Put into cheesecloth bag and let drain overnight. Add cabbage, peppers and criions which have been through food chopper. Mix vegetables together and add vinegar, sugar and spic- es, tled loosely iri a cheesecloth bag. Cook, uricovered, over lew neat until vegetables are tender, about 20 minutes. Pour irito hot, sterilized jars anid- seal. Yield: about 12 cups. (May omit cab- bage and reduce vinegar anid su- gar to 3 cups vinegar and 1 1/3 cups sugar.) Mrs. C. F. asks why some con- tainers of frozeh' food split at the seams anid if food is safe to use? Ariswer: Food must have been packed too tightly or the boxes may have been packed tegether tightly. The food may be good te use provided it is cooked or brought to a bail for 10 minutes. Mrs. B. D. asks how to reniove orange candle wax from a red rug? Answer: Sponge the waxed portion lightly with a liquîd made up of two parts water and one part of denatured alcohol af- ter scraping off as niuch wax as you cari. Anme Allan invites you to write te her c/o The Canadian States- mari. Send in your suggestions on homemaking Pro4b1ems andi watch this celunin for replies. The Country Editor Looks at Canada Cariadiaria: When Rev. Lorne Sutherlanid et Sudbury, Ont., took a Sunday pulpit in the Anglican Church at Cadlllac, Sask., while an a visit, it was the same cbureh where he had beeri baptiaed and been erganist; haîf cf these in the audience had been prescrit at bis baptisme. .. J. A. Wesley zeaily had his "cars pinried back" at Qu'Appelle, Sask., durig a build- ing bec at thc ink, he asiçed vol- uriteers te puait two large base- mient wal ternis together: they did, but he forgot te pull bis bead eut ef thc way, reporta The Pro- gress .-. . What wouid you say? When Mrs. C. Cotie won a $1,O0 cash pVrize at a-Lions bingo -at Rerifrew, she was asked how she fclt, ariswered "wonderfui" . . - Twe rmen working for brothens whose sawrnulis were miles apart sut tered brokeri legs by falling trees the sanie day, bath brought Into Prince George, E.C., bes- ý ital sanie tume . . . The Meifent ournal had an oddity brcught in by Tom Anderson, a horseshoe with potatoca grawîng arourid it ...The mari whe beught the Smiths Falls, Ont., hait-ton tire bell 56 years aga, a meniber et the town couricil la puttirig an a anc-mari fight te kecp it instead et sellirig it te a scrap dealer; wants it kept as a meniento.. Gaston Dupre, propnietor et St. Aridrew's Inn, Quebec, woke in the night te hear a crash et glass; lucky he did, fer the cat knocked botties, glasses aven in a frerizy tram amoke and flanies in the bar . .. The.Canadian Legian at Grenfeli. Sask.. this last sprimg sowed wheat an fermer golf course prôperty at the edge eftotwri; gar- ncred 1,000 busheis tirst day wifh eight acres still te be cut.. The Smithers, B.C., tire depant- ment bought a truck urider the 1000-mile free check-up guaran- tee, reached that mleage anid then were refused a check-up; reasen, truck purchased in 1923 and original vendor now defunct .- Heniry Nyhoît et North Battie- tord, Sask., caught up with a trust- img coyote on the road, chased if, caught it by the tail, then killed it reports The Optimist et that city . . At Cewichan, B.C., Sigurd Voltsness bas a row et beautiful sweet peas, vines il feet bigh . B ey. E. G. May, incumbent et Trimity Anglican Chunch. Ste. Agathe, Que., is refining atten 56 years in the ministry. The Rasefowm, Sask., Eagle: "A fewv days age, Canadian news broadcast listeriers were iritorm- cd some soldiers in an Eaterni Canadian Army Camp had beeri killed in a martan bomb accident ...names et those kiihed would mot be ammeunced until relatives have beeri informed .. . but hew about the feelings et the rela- tives et every ether mari station- ed at this same anmy camp? Was the kindriess te the three an four familles invohved worth the men- tal agany inthicted upen the rela- tives et ahi the other saldiens in camp." Suggests this kimd cf news item sheuld be withheld un- tii immediate relatives have becri informed. It was ancet these political meetings at which Commue was spouting bis sensehess bilge. "Who alone cari liberate the masses fremn capitaiistic savcry?" he de- marided hystericaliy. "«Stalin." camne thc chant. "Who aane is champion of the werking man.," *'Stalii." "And wha alone can make the country bear food anid wealth for ail" This finie a voice tram the near yeihed: "Ged." "Throw that biastcd free enter- priser out," screamed Uic enraged speaker. Huntingdan, Que., Gleaner: Our prescrit-day need is a broad- erted outiook upon lite's responsi- bilities. and a contraction ef sel- fish imdivîdualism. The Stouffville, Ont., Tribune commenta that "but for ail its techriological wonders, science has yet te invent anything that can take the traditiona.l place cf the farn dog." No methed bas been discovered. suggests a contemporary, for pre- venting the inflation produced by goverriment expenditures for there's ne such method. To ex- tent te which a Goverriment cari persuade, cajole, anid force Its people te rive up spending for censumptien purposes ini order te finance a war, the Government may avcld inflation. To the ex- tent te which it fala te do this, possibiy for very important reas- ens cf public psychology. it cre- ates inflation by its warlike ex- penditures, and this inflation must take the terni ot a rise ini prices, a detiation in the value cf meney. St. Croix Courier cf St. Ste- phen. N.B.. is bot about the new tax on candy, thinks gevernment is detern-&jned youngsters shall be deprived cf smail pleasures et childhood . . . figures that with the 4 per cent tax cf N.B., the haxes heaped upen this semi-food is about 60 per cent ef the retail pnîce of the product. W. H. Holding, President of C.M.A. in a speech: "Educational and pelitical leaders should give seriaus thaught te this question: should each minority group have the privilege ef disebeying any law that aeems te cent lict with its special interests ef the mo- ment?" Autumn Rally W.M.S. Maple Grove Church Thursday, Oct. 26th Autunin rally et the Eastern Section cf Oshawa Presbyterial Woman's Missionary Society cf the Uniited Church ef Canada wil be held in Maple Grove United Church Thursday, October 26th. Morning Session will open with Registration at 9:15 a.m. Guest speaker will be Miss Susan Smyth of Torento. Miss Smyth is a United Church worker among COURTICE New Canadians in Torento. Dinner will be served by the Maple Greve Ladies-75 cents. Aternoon Session wlU open at 1:30 part. Mru. M. Aubrey Love of Toronto wiii be Guest Speaker. Mrs. Love was the former Sec- retary cf Christiani Stewardshlp on Dominion Board. Closing about 3:45 p.m. AIl interested in- W.M.S. activi- ties try to attend ail day. OBITUARY MRS. GEORGE C O The death ocurred suddenly in Peterborough, Octeber 12, cf Fier- ence A. MacDonald, beleved wite cf the late George Cè. Roy. Mrs. Rey cellapsed while doing some business in a Peterborough bank and died before she ceuld be meved te hespital. Berri at Teeswater, the deceas- ed was a daughter of the late John and Alexandra MacDonald. She was married In Teeswater in 1912 and prier te living in Osh- awa had lived in Peterborough and Bowmanville. Many et aur eld citizens wiil recali that when they iived iri Bowmanville Mr. Roy was employed with the John McMurtry Ce. and they were ac- tive in the activities et St. Paul's Church where be was a valued m 3mber et the choir. Mrs. Roy was a member of Knox Presbyterian Church, Osh- awa, and a lite member et the Woman's Missionary Society cf the church. Predeceased by ber huabanýd ini February, 1942, she ia survived by three daughters. Mrs. J. K. McDenald (Margaret), Montreal; Mrs. R. D. Pearse (Iriez) and Mrs. M. E. Mclntyre (Betty), Oshawa. Also surviving are six grandchil- dren. Bey. H. F. Davidacri, minister ef Knox Presbyterian Church cenducted the funeral service at the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home an October 16. Interment was in Mount Lawn Cemetery, Oshawa. Interior Decorator Gives He1pful Advice On Color Hrmony It is better te live in colorful surroundirigs. even if your home looks like a circus ini the eyes cf others, than te be influcnced te use colors yeu don't reaily llke. That is the advice given by Henri Beaulac, interior designer and decerater, in an article ini the current issue ef C-I-L Oval. Don't lose sigbt cf your home as a whoie, the artist cautions. Onie rooni may be decerated in good celer harmony, but celors ini other rooma cor hallways may clash with it. A certain continu- lty should exiat frem ocerezoom te another. Whatever zoom you plan te de- comate should have a unity et col- oring. The decorater calis this unit "local tene." A zoom may be green, red or blue in local tene, with other colora subordin- ate te. yet brigirig eut or sotten- ing the local tories. Who should decide on this basic colour? It Is best for the persen living in the roem te make the fi- nal decision, says Mn. Beaulac. However. the basic colon may bc suggested by a decorator, or by the coleuring et existing walls, or by a carpet one warits te keep. For example, suppose you own a blue carpet, but tind that blue carpets have gene eut et fashiori. Attention cari be diverted from its coleur by using deeper blues on the wails, or using eritirely ceritrastirig tories te distract the attention. In general, well lighted zooms sheuld be given dark tories and vice versa. Anid although celours in a roem may vary in their in- terisity, the base coleur sheuld remain unchanged. Fer instance, troni indigo blue te periwinkle blue, the base stili remains blue. If the ceiiing is smootb and the walls rough, the curtairis et glaz- ed percale, ail the same ahade, the difference et texture wihi give the impression et a variety cf ce- leurs. Accessonies and turniture will give the complemnertary net- es necessary te make the zoom pleaslng te the eye. Colour cari play a thousand tricks - enlarge roms, iower cei- lings, stimulate people or depres them. But a particular colour does net necessarily produce the same eftect on everyone. A cer- tain coleur makes us happy be- cause it la associated in our mcm- ory with a happy event. There Is ne use trylig te fight against such pretererices. "Let us cheese the celors that please us," says Mr. Beaulac, "without paying attention te what ether people say anid w. will invariably achieve harmony with a personal touch' Few persans have sufficlunt wisdoni te preter censure, whlch ia useful, te praise wbich de- ceives them.-Rochefoucauld. DO WMAN VILLE BU1L N ( N A P' VEDI N C A AD A OR ANAD ANi 04M OCTOBER 1950 saewbe ad~pessi& té L.wemsupwcdas&e o thie, nw Ose4les or dada, idertndùiyê.4e yrT f 71iTIJIL IF,,11BFIFI IVr rif oBXKFTIIIÀ FII 1/IOISMOIIIF c' JUST NATURALLY, the car that stmrted firat, Io the. car that's abead rigbt new in the march cf motening progress! Yer Oldomobile brings you the benefits cf its extra expenience in Such' 4:volutionary advanccments as Hydra-Matic Drive-the pioncer no-sift drive that's finest because it was first in the field, and bas heen proved and improved threugh actual billions of miles of driving in the past ten years ! The great new Oldamobile "Rocket" Engine ta another first froni the continerit's mont experienced car maker. Piorieered two years mgo, it bas already started a major autemotive trend toward valvc-in-head enginea of much bigiier compression-but the '5Rocket" ia by far the greatest because it's first, it'g backcd by Many more years of remarch, deWeopnwnt Sd lp.fe& And ail through every medel cf the 1950 Oldsmobile "88" and the "76", powcred by its improved "Big Six" Engiue, there'is exampi. after example cf Oldsmobile quality leadership . & advantages that cerne te Oldsmobile owncns beause Oldsmohile, the. car that was first in the field cf ail cars made on this continent today, lia the good habit cf keeping the Iecd! So, go ahead-go years ahead-with an OIdsmobile 1 *HYDRA-MATIC DRIVE ... The truly autolnatic drive that outmodes thée rluteb pedal entirely! Proved b! billions of miles of driving since Olds pioneered ut more thon 10 years ago. Se simple, go relaming. . . such a tbrifl! Standard equipment on Rocket.Powered Olds "88-. optionai at extra COono "76" 6-cylinder modela. ~hA OLOSMODILE A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE ROY W . NICHL M Daily Reminder % -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 1 TUU A , OCTOBER 19. 195o TIM 1 CANAIDLAN ÈTÀTESMAN. BOWMANVI=, ONTAMO PAGE mm

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