8 PIECE oak dining soom suite, table. In good condition. Apply 21 Lippincott St. West, ton. gâ€"3â€"1w * Recs, T baitess und beis. Ajoly s, V pulleys an/ . Apply 80 Fourth Ave., Westmount. oâ€"3â€"1t BABY sleigh, practically new. 3 FOUR Quarterâ€"cut oak buffet and T-E[;erflï¬}i;iith- _aluminum | pans. Phone Zone 4â€"432. _ _ oâ€"2â€"1w BED. Spring (coil), fire screen, _ éeiling fixture, hot water radiaâ€" tor, Girls‘ skates, size 1. Phone 1092â€"R. RADIO, console (Eveready) _8 â€" tubes, reasonable. Apply 17 Omagh Avenue North, Weston. _ PAAR[THC;Kke_r spaniel, eight weeks â€" old. Frank seeza, Royal York road and Lawrence avenue. oâ€"3â€"1t _ one fishing reel (South Bend), nearly new, $30.00. Laceby‘s garâ€" age, Main St. N. Phone 1086â€"M. _ _ tires, good condition. Apply 97 Rosemount avenue. Phone 87.3 [ oâ€"3â€"1t fitial tire and tube tester for a large rubber manufacturer urgently wants to buy a new or ‘used c{clo- metér for 28â€"inch wheels. Please leave name and address c/8 Times and Guide office. Zone 4â€"426. ‘30 DODGE Coupe, B111CD, five OMAN wants work by the day. l1 kinds of housework excegt washing, Floors waxed and polishâ€" TRANSPORTATION wanted from ON® fishing rod (true temper), edwl"m’y cents an hour. Apply 40 John Street. oâ€"3â€"1w _ I;};OI;ISI_;ï¬ district) October 20. Phone 631â€"M. oâ€"31â€"1t ON SIDEWALK near Bonita Tea Reom, Weston, at midnight Satâ€" urday, white silk scarf. Owner may have same by paying expense of ad. Leave name and address at Times and Guide office, 3 Main street south, Weston. ~ oâ€"3â€"1t PRICED from $69 and up, Coney $6,000.00â€"VERY lovely, six rooms and sunroom, threeâ€"car garage; lower floor: beautiful living room openinf ixro a real reception hall, goodâ€"size dining room opening onto a verandah, beamed ceiling and fireplace, & real cosy kitchen, lots of light; second floor: three lovely bedrooms, one master, with dressâ€" ing alcove, rear bedroom opens into smart sunroom, hardwood, hot air. Phone Mr. Graham, B65â€"M. oâ€"3â€"1t ARRANGE your sleigh ride or sleighing party early. Phone JU. 0105: ncâ€"3â€"4w Queen‘s drive and Jane street to Sunnyside. Arriving 8.30 a.m., reâ€" turning 5 to 5.30 p.m, Phone 454â€"J after 6 p.m. & oâ€"3â€"1t THE undersigned who is the ofâ€" BIaQCK coat (Bromleigh) trimimed ith Persian Lamb, size 20, in excellent condition, also Isabella fox scarf. Phone Weston 1140. ; 0â€"33â€"1t IMMEDIATE possession, $3,500.00, fiveâ€"roomed frame house, good garage and nice lot, close to transâ€" portation. $1,000.00 cash. Phone Prineess Fashion Furs KLf3674 AD. 8881 xâ€"t ON MAIN street, December 9, _ socks and tie in Jack Fraser bag. Phone 631â€"M. oâ€"3â€"1t WILL the person please return the silver fox cape which was pickâ€" ed up by mistake at the Legion Hall, Weston, on Wednesday night. Apply 7 Bala Avenue, Mt. lgennais. » xâ€"3â€"1t FOUNTAIN pen on Main street (dyed rabbit), Viscacha, seal (dyed rabbit), beaver mouton, (processed lamb), Persian lamb, muskrat, Hudson seal, (dyed muskâ€" rat), Your old fur garment exâ€" pertly restyled to the new 1945 fashiop, _Price, $14. Repairedâ€"Relined Buttons tightened, new loops, reaâ€" sonable. 25 years experience, Work guaranteed. _ Residence 84 George St.___ _ T1 Yonge S_L- six chairs for sale. Phone 1127â€"J. oâ€"S1â€"1t ‘Nothing too small â€"Nothing too large‘. 6 Inquiries Pnvited r. Graham 565â€"M. ~~ TIMES & GUIDE . WANT ADS ARTICLES FOR SALE R. W. MacDONALD TRANSPORTATION WANTED Real Estate and Insurance FURS CLEANED OPPORTUNITIES OFFERED 74 John Street, Weston EMPLOYMENT WANTED $ Bicycle, 26 inch wheels, tically l‘v Phone Ke. 4916 gs after 6 p.m. N.C.â€"3â€"1t Preâ€"Season Sale HOUSES FOR SALE FUR COATS Y, DECEMBER 14, 1944 FURRIERS WANTED Office: FOUND LOST AD. 6331 Weston oâ€"3â€"1w oâ€"3â€"1w oâ€"3â€"1t oâ€"3â€"1t â€"1t In Memoriam McGINNISâ€"In loving memory of mother, Jennie McGinnis, who passed away December 11, 1943. Till memory fades and.life departs You live forever in our hearts. "Shoe the wild horse, shoe the wildâ€"mare, but let the little colt go bare" . . . hardly just nursery nonsense this in 1944, when good shoes for children are hard to find and leather seems to give so little fight to scuffing and wetting. The fact is that, while there is an increased demand for children‘s shoes, there is also a high priority claimant for the duravle, tough leather that was always used in their manufacture. Army boots need the sturdiest leather and that need comes first. This situation increases . the necessity of getting the maximum wear from shoes. ‘the first step is a good fit, for besides being a ’menace to growing feet, .badly fitting shoes are poor economy. ‘Shoes for young children should ‘have flexible soles, low heels, pliâ€" able uppers and should be threeâ€" quarters of an inch longer than the foot. As long as feet are growing it is important to allow this extra length. e â€" Shoe Care Is important During Shortage â€"Ever remembered by Vera, Irene, St. Clair and Emnie. _ It is wasteful (and a bit on the hoarding side) for‘a young child to have many shoesâ€"the Sunday Best can well be dispensed with. ‘These "good" shoes are outgrown before they are worn out and, unâ€" less they are exceptionally good, it is hard to keep them in condition for »wearing when younger memâ€" bers of the family have grown up to them. A child should have one or two pairs of shoes, of the best value obtainable for the price that can be paid, and proper care should be to keep them in good condition. _ Day-bf'-day good care consists of the application of oil dressing or waterproof polishes to clean the shoes and keei them proof against damp, When shoes get soaking wet they need particular care. They should be stuffed with paper to keep them in shapeâ€"but not stuffâ€" ed so that they will bulge or be stretchedâ€"and then lightly rubbed with castor oil. The shoes should be left at room temperature for 12 to 24 hours to dry. and absorb the oil, when they can be polished. Castor oil will not interfere with the polish of the shoes as other oils would. Shoes should never be dried under the stove or on the radiator or in any other hot spot. Heat dries out the natural oil and leaves the leather hard and stiff. Using soft paper to stuff shoes when not in use is better than using shoe trees which may do more harm than !gobd unless they are ntpertect fit for the foot. It is good for the equilibrium, for genâ€" eral appearance and for the shoes to keep heels repaired and even. Runâ€"down heels twist the shoe out of shape. 50c Minimum For First 28 Words. 2¢ Each Additional ments, In Memoriams Notices Under These Headings Good elk leather and patent 24 KLL COUPONS IN RATION BOOKS 3 AND 4 EXPIRE DECEMBER 31. 31 10 17 CONSUMER‘S RATION COUPON CALENDAR sUN | MON | TUES NOTICES Butter Coupons 86, 87, 88, 89 Canning Sugar Coupons F1â€"FIO D Coupons D1 â€" D16 Sugar Coupons 14 â€" 45 Preserves Coupons 17â€" 32 EXPIRE 25 _Deaths Engage 26 12 xâ€"33â€"1t 19 At right is pictured Major David Vivian Currie, 32, of Moose Jaw, Sask., and Owen Sound, Ont., who won the Victoria Cross for extreme personal bravery and leadership in the heavy fighting which took place around Falaise in France a few weeks after Hello, Homemakers! Who can resist the thought of Christmas! Wartime, or not, we just can‘t shut Christmas out. The heartâ€"warming good will, the ga{l decorations, the traditional food, these are the cherâ€" ished things we are striving to preserve in a world of chaos. Let us, in our kitchens, keep the light of Christmas burning. Let us bake & holiday cake, even if some of the iniredients are difficult to find, or substitutes must be used. DECEMBER Usually, we talked about Christâ€" mas cakes several weeks earlier than this, but the sugplie! this year were so uncertain that we decided you would be serving more cookies and small cakes during this festive season. However, stores have been displaying fresh supplies of sevâ€" eral fruit cake ingredients this week and there have been numerâ€" ous requests for recipes that we pu})'lished two years ago. . on. | ~WED | Here are recipes we gave you in 1942, about which we received many favourable comments: Dundee Cake 7‘cup butter, % cup sugar, 4 eggs, 4 cup nuts (chopped), 14 cup peel (cut fine), 2% cups flour, %tsp. salt, 1 tsp. baking powder, 1 cup seedless raisins, 14 cups currants, 2 ths. orange juice, Topping: !%% cup citron peel, cut in thin slices, and 14 cup candied cherries, cut in pieces. |_ _ _ _ _ Beat in eggs thorouibly.-Stir in nuts. Sift flour with baking powder and salt, mix with fruit, and add to first mixture. Add orange and lemon peel mixed with _ orange juice. Mix thoroughly and put in two or three small pans lined with wax paper and greased. Cover top leather can be washed with reutral soap and water and can also be cleaned with special creams. Auâ€" thorities say that when patent leather shoes are worn in cold weather they should be warmed to foot temperature before being put 20 By ANNE ALLAN Uydro Home Economist 227 Int Tess MIXING > BUWL :::; (‘Q 9 / is |reame um . â€"p /A 13 THE ANOTHER CANADIAN SOLDIER WINS VICTORIA CROSS 14 2] Sugar Coupons 48, 49 Preserves Counons 35. 3 28mmcmmvo, 9 Preserves Coupons 35, 36 Butter Coupons $8, 89 THURSDAY with candied cherries or _ citron. Bake in electric ovep 275 deg. for 1%4 hours.. > i o. ce Cover with Eaper for the last 20| minutes of baking, _ New Gumdrop Cake | 1% gZ/s’raisins, % cup of _ tater, % cup shortening, % cup sugar, 1 egg, %& tsp. soda in 2 tsps. hot water, %4 cup thick applesauce, 1% cups siftâ€" ed flour, % tsp. nutmeg, !4 tsp. cinnamon, %4 tsp. salt, 1 cup gumdrops (sliced, any kind but licorice), % cup nuts. Simmer raisins in water about three minutes. Cool. Cream shorâ€" tening and sugar thoroughly and beat in the egg. Dissolve baking soda in 2 tsps. hot water and add to applesauce; then fold into the creamed mixture. Sift flour, salt and spices together, Mix part of flour with gumdrops, raisins and nuts; then add to gatcer and fold in flour. Line a loaf pan with two thicknesses of greased paper and pour batter in. Bake in electric oven at 300 deg. for 1% hours. Victory Fruit Cake % cup sugar, e cup moâ€" lasses, % cup milk, 14 cup corn syrup, 1% cups fine wholeâ€" wheat flout; & cup pastry flour; 4 tsps. baking powder, 42 tsp. salt, 1 tsp. cinnamon, %4 tsp. each of allspice, cloves, mace ande(frated nutmeg, 2 cups of seeded raisins (cut in pieces), & cup thinly sliced peel, or glace cherries. Mix sugar, solasses, milk and corn syrup, Reserve % cup pastry flour. mix and sift dry ingredients. Combine mixtures, then add fruits dredged with the % cup flour. Turn into buttered and floured loaf pan and bake 50 to 60 minutes in an electric oven (325 to 350 deg.). English Plum Pudding T cup odpaatry flour, %4 tsp. baking soda, % tsp. salt, 1 tsp. cinnamon, %4 tsp. mace, 4 tsp. each cloves, allspice, ginger, cup brown sugar, % cup minâ€" ced suet, %& cup currants, 4 cup sultanas, 34 cup raisins, 4 Valid Valid COUPON VALUES TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON 2 2 29 BUTTER â€" %4 pound SUGAR . 1 pound 15 Dâ€"day. His wife, Mrs. Isabel Currie, and their nineâ€" yearâ€"old son, David Foster Currie, are shown at left in their Owen Sound, Ont., home. Major Currie is the fourtle Canadian ‘Army officer to win the Emâ€" pire‘s highest award for gallantry in this war. (CANADIAN ARMY PHOTOS). 30 23 16 SAT tbsp. mixed peel, 4 cup blanchâ€" ed almonds, % tsp. grated lemon rind, 1 tsp. lemon juice, % f;f grated carrot, %4 cup gra raw potato, %& cup grated raw apple. . Méthod: Sift flour, measure and reâ€"sift with soda and spices. Add all other ingredients. Combine thorâ€" oughly. Steam in covered, greased pudding pan for 3 hours. Reâ€"steam for serving. Carrot Pudding 2 cups graed carrots, %4 cup chopped suet, %4 cup sugar, %4 cup corn syrup, 1 tsp. salt, rind and juice of 1 lemon, 1 cup of erushed Graham crackâ€" er crumbs, ! cup nuts, 4 tsp. cinnamon, %4 tsp. cloves,~ 2 tsps. baking powder, 1. cup seedless raisins. Combine all the ingredients, Turn into a wellâ€"greaseq mould. Cover and steam in wellâ€"cooker 2 to 2% hours. TAKE A TIP Preparations for & fruit cake: 1. Pick over raisins and curâ€" rants, rinse in water, lift out and spread to dry before using. _ 2. Take off any large pieces of sugar on peel. Warm the peel slightly on a tgan in the electric oven and slice thin. Brown nuts and chop a little. Steam cherries if they are hard and cut in halves. I _ 8. Sift flour, then measure and sift again three times with the sp;ces, baking powder (if used) and salt. 4. Sprinkle fruits and nuts with about oneâ€"quarter of the sifted flour mixture. 6. Add flavourin? nn’ny syrup gradually, then fold it fhe Hour mixture and stir in the floured fruits and nuts. * 7. Pour cake batter into tins lined with two thicknesses of greasâ€" ed paper, filling the pans only twoâ€" thirds full. f 8. Bake in an electric oven preâ€" heated to only 300 dei. If you have one with two switches for the oven, use bottom switch on]yï¬t;q; heating. A small tin of hot wa in the one provides moisture while baking. _ _ . Anne Allan invites youfto write to her in care of this newuiaper. Send in your suggestions on homeâ€" making problems and watch this column for replies. * 5. Beat the butter until creamy; add sugar gradualx and beat, in eggs gradually. If the mixture 'be- gins to curdle, add some of the flour and continue beating in the egE® 0. _: T m h many are preparing to cancel all suicide indemniml %ecause/o% the great increase of self destruction in Germany. * The London Daily Sketchâ€"says life insurance companies in Gerâ€" In England and Wales there are now 1,500 wartime day nurseries where babies are cared for while their mothers mre doing war work. Some day the whole story of the part played in the P Ti of it which does not lie unknown in those anonymous graves so hastily filled by Nazi reprisals. Many of the victims in the graves are women and many died with resistance secrets lockn{i withâ€" in their minds. Some were resâ€" €ued by patriots before the final shot was fired. Madame Ruse was one of these. Madame Ruse was kin&pin of the whole nt-u{of one of the most important and brilliant underground papers, La Libre Belâ€" gique. The correspondents gave her their copy. The{ met her now in a cafe, now as if by chance at a store Madame Ruse Belgian Woman Escapes Nazis counter, again in a park or street. Usually the articles were written by hand, Mme. Ruse typed them on a machine hidden in her house. Then she gave them to the editorial staff of the paper, then to the typographer and to the printer. During the second questioning she was beaten with a rubber hose. The policemen struck her in the face with their fists. Pointed woodâ€" en sticks were inserted under her nails until she fainted. But she did not speak. _ D Eventually she was crammed inâ€" to a train, along with 2,000 other people to be taken to Germany. But the Pelgian railway workers were on the lookâ€"out. They conâ€" trived to take three whole days to cover the distance of about 20 miles. The unfortunate prisoners were brought back to Brussels, and the advance of the liberating armâ€" ies freed them. 20_ _ ‘The Gestapo was always hot on the track of La Libre Belgique and: the paper was never printed in the same place two days in succession. No one was more constantly exâ€" vosed to danger than she was and no one was so well acquainted with the intricacies of getting the paper out. She was thus questioned and torâ€" tured to the limit of physical enâ€" durance eighteen times. Eighteen times she braved the bloody sadism of these brutes. But she did not spenk. She never spoke. Ne Some months ago Mme. Ruse was arrested. She was first interrogatâ€" ed without being made to suffer too much. But she was given to underâ€" stand that it would be much worse the next time if she refused to speak. _ n es A dazzling beauty before the war, young and lovely Mme. Ruse is now a broken whiteâ€"haired womâ€" an but she has brought comfort and couragze to tens of thousands of Belgians for whom the secret and faithful voice of her paper was their only support in years that were as dark as human beings have ever endured. Telling others they are wrong is easy. Showin« others what is right is harder. Nobody can give to others what he hasn‘t got himself. THANK YOU, FOLKS, I will endeavor to merit your continued confidence and friendship. cret of this is dyeing. _ To do this it is neces bleach the stockings first. A of odd !atockings, their &"’m is a sad &I“ But it runs, needn‘t be, lo:' fln‘sï¬u'l of quite different shades can be teamâ€" ed up for lots more wear, The seâ€" PHONE 812 269 Main Northâ€"Weston Authorized Service for CHRYSLERâ€"PLYMOUTH CARS ... FARGO TRUCKS WESTON 1061 Tom Clough Motors TAds QQSS\“\};* ': mt on y our s sLUncH NO Bonita Tea Room WHERE GOOD FOOD MEANS GOQD HEALTH Fords â€" Chevrolets â€" Dodge â€" Plymouth $ss 1 uINCH HI zT/ <LUNCH HOUR w\ aeem~ ) DINE‘ IN BONITA Deputy Reeve, Ward 3, North York Township, for 5 years, 1941 to 1945. Elected School Trustee for 35 Conâ€" secutive Years, 1912 to 1947, Maple Air Conditioned For Your Comfort Nelson A. Boylen Leaf School Section No. 31. NO WAITING All stockings respond to treatment if carefully done. ] must be handled very it is wet Mthxt'i:,l quite feasible and who could: two or three extra pairs of TORONTOâ€"LY. 9911