seaping this spring to catch up 'isg :ï¬p.wlv_ starters. 0000 _ _ Mr. Alf Atkin, president of the Weston: Horticultural Society, has kindly consented to act as Chairâ€" man of the Board of Judges, and he will be assisted by the executive of the Weston Horticultural Society. Judging will take â€"place this weekâ€"end, commencing Friday and continuing until all gardens have been judged. Incidentally, you do not have to enter your name to compete; your garden will ‘be judged unless you wish otherwise, In. which case just mention it to the judges when they call. _ Release of the score card was witheld for the same réason that the judging was delayedâ€"in order not to handicap those who had to start from seratch this spring and would not have had the time to concentrate on the specific points which will be judged. The score card which follows was drawn up by the competition committee â€" Messrs. Tom McCagherty and Alf. It‘s rather late in the season we x but.at last we are able to nuomlldmcuduwd J. H. Wallace & Son PEG O‘ MY HEART THAT‘S MY DESIRE I WONDER WHO‘S KISSING HER NOW ASK ANYONE WHO KNOWS Victors Latest for the week at Weston Music & Radio TALLAHASSEE Furnaces Repaired and Vacuum Cleaned I WONDER, I WONDER, I WONDER ALMOST LIKE BEING IN LOVE THE ECHO SAID "NO" TOMMY DORSEY (All Time Hits) RUDOLF FRIML MELODIES FREDDY MARTIN (Concertos for Dancing) OKLAHOMA s Weston Music & Radio 28 MAIN N. Phone: Weston 462â€"w ~ _ 21 Third Ave. ESTIMATES FREE WESTON k â€" Free Admission to Grounds FREE' Free Parking and Bleachers FREE' M Wkung 16 Free Ball Game and Features t Colossal Prizes â€" Friday 8 p.m. BIN GO Saturday Afternoon and Evening Under Cover Eavestroughing Asphalt Shingles Insulâ€"Bric Siding by the Three Suns. by Sammy Kaye. by Perry Como, by Sammy Kaye. by Vaughn Monroe by Louis Armstrong. by Larry Green. by Sammy Kaye. WESTMOUNT James 7Melton, Eleanor Steber, John Charles Thomas. FU N MUSIC BY JIMMIE TUCKER AND HIS NEW RHYTHM BAND 8.30 â€" 12 Friday, Saturday, September 26, 27 Latest Albums > D SATURDAY PANCING ON NEW FLOOR â€" FRIDAY AND SATURDAY & AS, ERLEA:®: Landscapingâ€" (total: 100 I»intlâ€" 1. General appearance of entire half acre, 25 Yï¬m'; 2. Lawn (esâ€" tablished; wellâ€"maintained; freeâ€" dom from weeds) 25 points; 3. Foundation &1:!(!!‘, 20 points; 4. Perennial bordeér or bed (harâ€" Gromset, assisted by Major Wesâ€" monious â€" colour; continuity . of bloom), 10 points; 5. Hedges (esâ€" tablished; trim‘ and uniform); 10 points; 6. Ornamentation â€"(terâ€" races, paths and walks, driveway ete., . rockeries; originality), 10 points. + Vegetable Gardens (total: 100 ‘?dnu) â€"» 1. General appearante plan; ltrnlght. even, wellâ€"filled rows; freedom from weeds), 20 points; 2. Variety of vegetables ‘(uniformit,. size and shape), 20 points; 8. Value to family (apâ€" proximately yield; continuity of yield), 40 points; 4. Quality of vegetables (plant health; freedom from insects), 20 points. The Careful Driver Did you ever watch two cars travel the same road? One goes bumping along, hitting every rock and hole in the way until you think that it must be a very poor road. The other car travels the same road as evenly as if it were running on a floor. â€" 0 _ The first driver "just goes," apâ€" parently tm% to keep away from the ditches. e other chooses his route cnefullil in order to reach a definite goal. His eyes are fixed not on the side fences but on the road ahead and the place he plans to reach. â€" â€" R WESTON RECREATION CENTRE (Entrance Off Lawrence Ave.) We are like carâ€"drivers. Some of us jolt along through our days havâ€" ing an exciting time but spendinï¬ most of our energy bumping up an down instead of going %orward. Sometimes we bump because the road is new, sometimes we have not learned how to manage our maâ€" chines,. but most often because we are just riding without a clear idea of where we want to land, We need a purpose big enough to take all our steering skill and strength if there is to be steady driving.â€" M.M.F. ADVERTISING PAYSâ€"TRY IT FREE FALL ZONE 4â€"400 20â€"22712 20â€"2251 20â€"2315 20â€"2239 20â€"2294 20â€"2228 20â€"2250 20â€"2330 163 165 169 988 First ltlf. of construction of a $4,000,000 biscuit factory, claimed to be the most modern in existence, is underway on a 25 acre Etobicoke site at Lakeshore Road near Park Lawn Road, south of the Queen Hello Homemakers! One of the! Cream shortening and sugar; best fuelâ€"saving utensils is the|add egg and chocolate; beat thorâ€" Fressur'e nucefmn It is ideal for |oughly, add sifted dry ingredients arge and small families, rich and |alternateley with milk, Fill greased poor, career women and homeâ€"\moulds lined with wax paper % makers, â€" full; cover with wax or parchment Nutritive value, colour and flavâ€"|paper. Place coffee can lid and our are maintained to & highirack in Cooker with 2 cups water. degree if you observe the correct|Steam without indicator weight for length of cookini time while uaing115 _minutes, then put on indicator the pressure method. Furthermore, weight and cook 25 minutes. Nutritive value, colour and flavâ€" our are maintained to a high degree if you observe the correct length of cookini tinfe while using the pressure method. Furthermore, if you follow the rules, nothing ever burns and the pan is easy to clean. To remind you of seasonal dishes, we submit a chart for preparation of four servings. Time Table for Pressure Cooker (Cooking time in minutes after mins. for 5 lbs. Lamb Stew (1 cup water) 15 mins Tongue (2 cups water) 50 mins. Squash (%4 cup water) 13 mins indicator reaches "cook") Meat Balls (1 cup tomatoes) mins. Swiss Steak (4 cup water) mins.â€"after browning. Picnic Ham (% cup water) â€"in pieces Potatoes (! whole, Turnips (% pieces. Carrots (% sliced. _ â€" Fruit Custardâ€"4 mins. Brown Bettyâ€"10 mins. Cranberry..Puddingâ€"35 mins. Fine Oatmeal (2% cups water) 2 mins.â€"one cup cereal. Spaghetti (3 ‘cups water) 6 mins. one cup of pieces. Rice (14 cups water) 10 mins.â€" one cup rice. Brown Soup Stock 2 lbs. lean beef, 2 ats, water, % cup diced carrots, %& cup sliced onion, bone marrow, 1 small bay leaf, 1 tbsp. salt, % cup celery with leaves, spray parsley. Cut bone marrow into emall pieces and render. Cut meat in small pieces.Bplnce half in Cooker, add water. Brown the other half of meat in the melted marrow, add remaining ingredients. Cook 20 minutes. Strain soup and keep in cool place. ‘Ment Loaf 1% lb. round steak, %4 1b. pork, 2 eggs beaten, 2 thsps. chili sauce, salt and pepper, 1 onion, 1 carrot, 1 stalk celery, 4 cup corn flakes, 1 tbap. fat. l c Have meat ground twice. Grate all ingredients and mix well. Form into a round loaf by placing the meat on wax paper and form round and firm with your hands, remove paper. Heat Cooker, add shortenâ€" ing and sear until brown, loaf can be easily turned with Jnmcake turner. After searing, add 2 or 3 tbeps. water. Cook 15 minutes. Swiss Steak _ on 2 lbs. round steak (1 inch thick), salt and pepper, 2 tbsp. fat, 1 small onion (cut fine), 2 tbsps. horseradish, 4 cup water. _ Heat Cooker, add fat. Season steak dipped in flour pounded with knife. Brown on all sides. Place cut onions on steak with horseâ€" radish. Add water. Cook 15 minâ€" utes. Steak may be cut into strips before cooking. About 3 to 5 strips to the pound. Chocolate Pudding 8 tbsps. shortening, % eup sugar, 1 egg, 2 one oz squares of unsweetened chocolate, 1 cup milk, 1% cup flour, 8 tsp. baking powder, 2 cups water. LIONS TTMES ‘AND GUIDE, WESTON â€" : WILL ERECT $4,000,000 BISCUIT PLANT IN ETOBICOkE cup eup eup water) 12 mins water) 8 mins water) 4 mins 10 15 45 Take a Tip To obtain best results from Pressure Cooker: o â€" _-f.“lireépi the cover handle and cooker handle tight. _ _ i _ 8. Be careful not to drop indiâ€" cator weight. s ul _ 2. Always keep sealing bands clean and be sure vent pipe is open and clean before each use, _ 4. Never pour cold water into a dry, overheated cooker as this may cause it to crack. 5. Be sure at all times to remove indicator weight before attempting to remove cover. Do not force cover open if it seems to stick or is hard to turnâ€"this means there is still pressure in the cooker and it should be cooled again in a pan of cold water. â€" mmammwame _ 6. If the cooker should leak, remove the gasket and turn it over. Insert it again. _ _ 0_ _ 9. Never strike rim of cooker with spoon or knife. This will cause nicks and allow steam to escape. _ a m _ 8. Do not insert indicator weight in water as this will cause the inside of it to rust. â€" Anne Allan invites you to write to her (c/o name of paper). Send in your suggestions on homeâ€" making x‘problems and watch this column for replies. Store all cheese so that it will stay moist as well as cool, Reâ€"wrap packaged cheese in its own coverâ€" ing after cutting; keep cover on jar cheese; wrap weages of cheddar in waxed paper and place in covered dish, Use any dried edges in cooked dishes. Store cottage cheese in its own carton or & covered dish if bought in bulk. Use wall space to good advantâ€" age. A shadow box with shelves is decorative, will hold bobby pins, makeup and such, keep them from getting mixed up with drugs, The most important part of lookâ€" ing smart is wearing what‘s becomâ€" ing. In makeup you can afford to be individual, If the "very latest" color fashion doesn‘t suit you, hunt for the shade that does. Choose makeup by the fast rule that it must tone first with your skin and second with your clothes, . This goes for foundation, powder and lipstick: Think twice about hairâ€" dos too. Wellâ€"kept and in good condition are the prime compliments the hair stylist pays his models‘ hair. To earn them for yourself, add to your daily brushing and weekly was{inz a between shampoo freshening with hair tonte, Apply the tonic directâ€" ly to the scalp, then comb through hair. Reset wave, put on net and let dry. Your wave will last longer, your hair have more shine. Keep butter coveredâ€"extra supâ€" ply in its own waxed carton, #mall amounts in a covered dishâ€" and all because butter takes to itâ€" self any spare odors that may be floating around. For soft butter, leave out of the refrigerator only the amount you need at the moment, To Melt Chocolate Neatly: Place on piece of heavy waxed paper in bottom of small saucepan and melt over hot water as usual. Lift out and scrape from paper into cake batter or whateverâ€"no waste and an easyâ€"toâ€"wash pan. Refrigerate egRS ?uickly too. They lose as much freshness in three days at room temperature as in three weeks if refrigerated. Use a wire basket for convenience, a covered _ container for . storing longer than two or three weeks. Wash just before you use them. shake as dry as possible, Pack in ‘don ¢lmr‘n.mmmn To Koor l"-ulo‘ Fresh to the Last Sprig: Wash parsley and Household Hints One of the Literary Guild selecâ€" tions is a detailed study of a marriage, and an era. It is Richard Sherman‘s ~pleasant and slightly â€" nostalgic novel, "The Bright Promise." Fundamentally, | the book is the story of the marâ€" riage of Amy and Llyle Ellery,. Their marriage began the day FDR was inaugurated and the US banks closed, and the story ends as the President‘s coffin is brought into the White House. Politically and historically, these were turgulent. and tremendous years and Amy and Lyle‘s life together followed the pattern of their era. Marrying on the proverbial shoestring, the Ellexgs. like the rest of the world, found the early thirties a bitter pillâ€"at one point, Lyle has to go on the dole. Through an ironic twist of cireumstances Amy and Lyle meet the wealthy and social Royal and Laura Archer, and Lyle is able to interest them in his i({el for an allâ€"picture magazine, patâ€" terned after the nowâ€"familiar forâ€" mula used by "Life". The magaâ€" zine, called "Panorama" is an instant success and the Ellerys move from Greenwich Village to Park Avenue in one fell swoop. r\e plot begins to thicken when my discovers that her husband has been having an affair with Laura Archer. Amy forgives Lyle when he assures her that he loves her only and is no longer interested in {,aura, but Royal Archer is not as generous and Lyle loses his job witg "Panorama." Once again the Ellerys are on the downgrade. They decide to leave New York and reâ€" turn to Amy‘s hometown, Ammon, Iowa, Lyle starts to work for Amy‘s father, John Hardin, on the Ammon weekly newspaper, Amy is happy to be living again in & small town atmosghere and easily settles down to the commonplace pleasures of everyday life, Lyle does not adjust himself as readily to life in Ammon. He is a born New Yorker, son of a millionaire father who committed suicide in the |‘29 crash, a Harvard graduate, Lyle finds few intellectual comâ€" patriots in Ammon and is lonely and frustrated. Once again Royal Archer enters their lives â€" the lovely Laura has left him and he lia anvioue for Lvle to return to fhe Bright Promise is anxious for Lyle to return to the magazine and to reâ€"establish their business association,. So Amy and Lyle again pack their bags and start up the social scale once more. This would have been perhaps & good goint at which to end the story, but Author Sherman still has a few rabbits in his hat â€" the fattest being the declaration_of war. There is the inevitable Dec. 7 cocktail party and the inevitable discussions afterwards. Ifâ€"we can believe all we read about Dec. 7. 1941, it would appear that the enâ€" tire population of the, United States was attending cocktail parâ€" ties durini the attack on Pearl iHarbnur. yle enlists and is sent overseas, and almost too dramticâ€" ally, their only child develops polio on the eve of his departure. The child‘s cure and Lyle‘s ultimate return enable the author to give his book the conventional happy ending. Possibly the best thing about "The Bright Promise" is _ the vividness with which Author Sherâ€" man recalls the era about which he writes. There is a liberal sprinkling of the headline stories of the period which add immeasurâ€" ably to the book‘s color and will give its readers a touch of pleasant nostalgia, Many of the book‘s minor characters are exceptionally well drawn. Particularly interestâ€" OLDEST AIR TRAVELLER ing is Lyle‘s mother, a fluttery dipsomaniac with blue-ged hair. By stressing such glamofous charâ€" acters, Richard Sherman will conâ€" vince most of hik readers that he has writtee a very fine book. Clara â€" Eddelstone, _ 101â€"yearâ€"old Chicagoan, flew by Transâ€"Canada Air Lines from Chicago to Montâ€" real recently to visit relatives. Mrs. Eddelstone, _ TCA‘s _ oldest assenger, formerly lived in glontrul. and returned for a month‘s visit with her grandchilâ€" dren and great flrlndchildren. And made her first i:ht when she was 100â€"yearsâ€"old, and thinks air travel is tops. refrigerator. It will keep fresh and crisg for two or three weeksâ€"all ready to use as a flavor or garnish, Special note to business girls or women on th‘:d'o. If you need a new faceâ€"do before the end of the day, for goodness sake, be off with the old before you‘re on with the new. Keep cotton, tissues and a quick cleanâ€"up Mrltbnâ€"d}!g drawer, â€" Make i them every time REVIEWING THE BOOKS Mid Oct. Meeting urned > on of the uen ol in of Abe the Thanksgiving Day holiday inâ€" stead of ko.g:k_on"_- h;‘"itynuly tead of October 9.. as previously ‘:moo':d by .qu.f' government sources. L One of the important measures ns nds Sm Iat revision of the Act which will deal with superannuaâ€" tion of ‘civil servants and. make other changes in civil . service administration. GIANT BEANS It is reported in the Australian Newsletter, says Agriculture Abroad, that edible beans more than four feet long, weighing up to 14 lb, each, have been grown in the State of Victoria from seeds brought from New Guinea. Once set, the beans are said to grow at the rate of 2% inches a day. Too many people mistake their own prejudices for the will of God. 3 CARS To Serve You 24 Hours A Day W IN D ER‘S WHEN THE SHOE | IS ON THE OTHER FOOT More And More New Cars | _ T A X I At End of Car Line 2803 DUNDAS ST. W. 429 MAIN ST. N. 1 1 1 WESTON know production schedules do not nearly meet the demas We also know that the time is not too far distant when new cars will be "SOLD" not "BOUGHT." are trying to continue pleasant associations, and hope to hold. your respect and patronage NOW and in the > . "SELLING" days to come. ' are rolling off assembly lines, bringing added happiness and pleasure to carâ€"loving Canadians. HUDDLESTON MOTORS HUDDLESTON MOTORS HUDDLESTON MOT © CHRYSLERâ€" "WE SERVE THE WEST END in his ang-n regation on the good Samaritan. | nund-.zlhv nice it'uhhiavln-uuuuht you when ill, and asked, "How Many small hands shot up, but what rocked the congregation was 1236 WESTON RD. i Pm BOX OFFICE OPENS 6.15 P.M. DAILY FRLâ€"SAT LIMITED 9» Alan.Ladd in "THIS GUN FOR HIRE" with Veronica Lake THEREFORE, "HIGH SCHOOL â€"Laird Cregar _ â€"AKided Featureâ€" The Teen Agers in HERO®" with June Preisser THURS., FRL, SAT.â€"SEPT. 28, 26, 37 "GEORGE ON CIVVY STREET â€"ADDED ATTRACTIONâ€" Leo Gorceyâ€"Bowery Boys in *Â¥ s ouu"r"l')zum's : T HEA T RE "MR. HEX" with Huntz Hallâ€"Bobby Jordan . 19â€"20 :ï¬h George Formby in e {ofler t Tyronne Power with Henry Fonda "THE RETURN OF ' FRANK JAMES" _______Henry Fonda in . [ ; . "JESSE JAMES" . ‘5"4 â€"Companion Pictureâ€" hx 8 MON., TUES., WE SEPT. 22, 28, 4 At i