thpmoat tkbbu vkh imi the acton free press page of interest to women memiximbbowl ucncnimuc rakiv worn sltho hnmemafcetr a box party has many possdbflltles for entertain- ins children and its tfme to plan for their valentine party have tho children decorate a box or basket let them clip colored pictures and paste on attractively each box should hold several small sandwiches use brawn and white bread spread with ege vegetable cheese or jelly filling raw crisp carrot or turnip strips muifln and some cookies wrap each food separately in waxed paper place the lunch in neatly together with serviette the tea party will then be complete wlh the exception of the hot chocolate to be prepared by the hostess who will have very few dishes to wash afterwards 94 thin slices of white bread 1 cream cheese three ounces 3 tablespoons butter or margarine teaspoon salt 1 small bottle i cherries cut fluted rounds from the slices of bread cut small hearts from 12 slices soften cheese and butter and blend add salt and enough liquid from cherries to make mixture of spread- ins consistency spread whole slices with cheese mixture sprinkle centre of each with cherries minced and cover with remaining slices makes 12 sandwiches i later oalmiasl oeeldes 214 cups regular oatmeal 24 cups light brown sugar 3 table spoons flour teaspoon salt 1 cup cooking fat 1 egg slightly beaten m teaspoon vanilla combine first four ingredients add cooking fat and stir add egg and vanilla drop spoonfuls of batter 2 inches apart on a greased cooky sheet 3ake in over 32s3s0 degrees f for 12 minutes top with maraschino cherries cut in halves 2 tablespoons shortening cup com syrup 1 egg 1 cup packaged bran cup milk 1 cup flour u teaspoon salt 21 teaspoons bak ing powder v4 cup raisins cream shortening and corn syrup thoroughly add egg and boat well stir in bran and milk let soak 5 min utes sift flour salt and baking powder add to first mixture and stir in raisins pour into greased tins bake in oven at 400 degrees for 30 minutes a tip 1 take precautions to serve foods providing vitamin c in ample a- mounts cue to seasonal conditions one being the loss of the c vitamin in potatoes now so long stored the most helpful foods are citrus fruits oven canned tomatoes potatoes cooked in the skins raw cabbage and turnip black currants in any form and other fruits contribute a little serve slaw crisp turnip sticks stud grated turnips in mixed salads cook vegetables in as little water as possible as ahrfrt a time as will make them tender and serve at once standing steals their vitamin c dont expose them to air until on the famjjy plates that means covering with a tea towel if they have to stand 2 serve baked potatoes three timed a week la a good slogan the question box mrs cm asks ruciih for carrot marmalade answer carrot and onintit mnr- snalade6 medium sized carrots 3 oranges 1 lemon juice and gi ntd rind sugar dice carrots and cook until tondov using as ilttlo water as possible cut oranges and lemon into tunnl pieces combine carrots and frutt and add twothirds as much sugar as mixture simmer mixture until it is clear and thickened use electric element on low after product begins to boll pour into hot sterilized jars and seal chiwiides ot ginger farm written- hniiitslu far the acts wee press by gwendoline i claskst ard ingredients for butter tarts be come dry and hard answer do not use too much egg in the mixture small egg to l cup sugar the tarts may have been bake at too high temperature use 400 degrees for small tarts and small quantities and 25 degrees more for two or three pans mrs j r asks recipe for potato stuffing for tenderloin answer potato stuffing 3 cups mashed potatoes 1 cup soft bread crumba cup melted butter tea spoon poultry seasoning 1 beaten egg 2 tablespoons chopped onion mix above lngredlehts together lightly with fork southport england cp ad opting the policy that every good hus- oand should be jgootf gardener and every wife a cooa cook this lanca shire town launches a fiveweek scheme to make u centre of per fect married couples signs of the times that is what i thought as i went for the mall this morning you see in the little time that it took me to walk from the house to the road and back again six planes went over my head all in different directions but never a car did i see at all more planes in the air than can on the road lent that something 7 x wonder how it will be after the war i mean will there be more planes and less cars or more cars and less planes naturally planes will be in greater demand for com mercial use but i suppose unless they develop some kind of aerial flivver you and 1 will still be quite content to roll along on the road and think ourselves mighty lucky at that hav ing passed through a period of not belng to roll along just when we felt like it- recently i wondered whether our car was doomed to be laid up for the duration you see one day partner and i were going to town and as we started partner said i had better drive easy as i had a tire that looked as if it might blow out any time i have told you that partner absolutely re fuses to drive a car havent it that may have been good advice it is bet ter to be safe than sorry especially where a car is concerned but it cer tainly didnt add to my comfort x knew i should have tried my luck at getting a couple of new tires but with one thing and another i had put it off now i was really driven to it the application was sent away and i waited and waited and waited each passing day increased my uneasiness i heard rumors of applications being turned down of government regul ations being tightened up and i can tell you that shabby old 30 ol ours began to look llkefra million dollars and then after three weeks the per mit came through i think when we get the iires i shall trim themup with pink bows just to celebrate did i mfar someone say oh yes a farmer gets all the breaks just let me try for new tires and see how far i i would get well i can understand your viewpoint it must seem pretty tough to you when you probably feel that a car is just as necessary to you i as to the farmer but yet you are getting along without it arent your whereas the farmer well a car is as necessary to him now as any of his field implements take our car for instance it hardly ever goes to town without bringing back a hundred of bran shorts chop or laying mash it takes in eggs and chickens grain to be chopped and sometimes it is plied high with red cross sewing knitting and quilts it takes people to and from the station it gets repairs and does the weekly shopping it goes to church and to meetings it calls at every farm in the district whenever a red cross drive is on and occasion ally it does take us to a show oh yes and once in a while it goes to the city when shopping becomes a vital necessity but never since gas rat ioning has it used up all the couponu to which it is entitled we apply for tho lowest category on which wo think wo can manage and then wo try to utto lest whan wo have orders for bolllntf fowl it is m job to pick out tho birds t hat are not laying experts tell you that if you look for this and that you can always tell if a bird is lay ing or not well if i follow all tho rules and pick a bird that dotlnltcly shouldn t be laying i generally find too late that sho was all set to lay eggs for the rest of her natural life so now i ignore the experts instead i stand quietly inside the pen and proper meals a big factor in airshow mivrasks why do the a tn d what i watch for d ingredients for butter tarts bel but there i something about the look of a hen that tells me whether she is laying or not take that one yesterday by all the rules she should have been laying but f didnt think she looked as if she were so partner killed her and she wasnt was i glad i was right second sight oh i dont think so just hen sight i guess it is twelvethirty perhaps it might be a good idea if xwent to bed cxviuans honobed london cp gen sir bernard montgomery headed the list of nearly 3000 soldiers mentioned in dispatches for gallant and distinguished ser vices in the middle east among 11 civilian in the list published in the london gazette was basil glngeu exchange telegraph war correspond ent bjcjlf cooks see hurt afnaea get ht kind of flood be fore taldnr off on boenmnff filftms with the rcjlp in britain cp when an rcap bomber navigator gunner or pilot is ovei germany it doesnt pay if he develops nervous stomach he has enough things to worry about without butterflies on the in side and thats one of the jobs of the rclap women s division cooks in britain to see that when the planes take off every man has just the right amount and right kind of food a girl realizes shes pretty import ant to a bombing op said law dor- othy newman of regins saslc as the mashed potatoes for the pro- flight supper for air crews i good food or bad food may make the difference as to whether i bomber crew gets back or not she explained that before a show i the boys are given poached eggs bacon- and mashed potatoes fried j food might upset their stomachs everybody waits with hearts in their mouths for the return of the squadrons but among the most anx ious are the wlds to wait in the kitchen hoping they will serve as many predawn breakfastst as they did suppers before the raid counts betartrnlagjplanes law edna coombs of sarnla ont was frying bacon and anxiously counting every plane that roared over the mess on the way to the landing field twenty she said half tojier- self as she looked up from hbefrove yes we dont mind wheraywere called out to cook as long as the boys come back i could fry potatoes all day sam law violet gabbey of edmonton as she shook a wire basket of chips all we hope is that the boys come back to eat them in the airmens mess sgt myl wilson of montreal disclosed that only that day 10 more wld cooks had been added to the stations messing staff its a good thing he said rc a f girls are more interested in food than waafs theyll take more trouble to make the rations we get taste appetizing tit lt h j wilson of winnipeg messing officer for tho canadian stations under bomber command explained the difficulties wld cooks face when they come to britain they bring their recipes along when they come he said hut they have to forget about them and loarn to cook with what we can get the week at ottawa by docxuas gbeen time lost negligible london cp the number of working days lost by strikes in brit ain during 4 years of war would if spread over the whole wageearning population amount to leu than one- half day one economist has estimated ottawa cp canadas policy regarding postwar immigration ap pears to be one of the most content ious of the issues being discussed in the house of commons several quebec members alread have registered opposition to the largescale admission of refugees be fore the session opened a movement was launched to obtain signatures fojgj a petition asking that canada relax htr barrierr rgntn- their tldmiloi and accept immigrants without regard to their race or creed since then gordon fraser progres sive conservative member for peter borough west has expressed his personal opposition to the admission of refugees or other immigrants to canada until all canadians have been established in jobs after the war when and if immigration were per mitted he said all prospective im migrants should undergo strict phys ical and mental examinations before being admitted one school of thought un the im migration question takes the view that canadas immense i rca and widelyscattered population renders her particularly suitable as a ettllnft place for newcomers after tho war and that her full potentialities will not be realized until her population is greatly increased an opposition view is that the do minions arable area is small in re lation to her size and that industry is concentrated in eastern canada where the den ity of population is greatest ontario wants briton premier george drew of ontario said while on a recent visit to britain that he favored the admission of im migrants of british stock and that ontario would welcome them after the war considerable english capital already is invested in british columbia which is expected to attract many settlers in the postwar years scope of the federal governments legislative program as indicated in the speech from the throne has drawn from critics of the administration the claim that prime minister mackenzie king is putting his political fences in order against the general election which in some quarters is expected later this year victor quelch new democracy member for acadia characterized the governments thronespeech outline of social security legislation as a pat ent medicine cureall and said tho people are suspicious or death bed re- pentences he added that the gov ernments capacity to handle post war questions is doubted new cbc governor announcement by war services minister lapieche of the nppolntmont or william j parker of winnipeg to tho board of governors of the can adian broadcasting corporation fol lowed a statement by h h ilannam president of the canadian federation of agriculture that the organization no longer would be content to play menial part in canadian affairs mr parker president of the mani toba pool elevators is also vice- president of the c f a and his ao- polntment addj a representative of agriculture to the board recently the cbc board decided to allot half an hour a month to leaders of the principal political parties to enable them to expound their views betw elections this action was a sequel to the banning of the cbc of an address at hamilton by john bracken national leader of the pro gressive conservative party the cbc itself already has been the target of criticism in the house ot commons and some sections of the press have been critical of the ex tent to which it has accepted revenue from sponsored programs while col lecting a yearly licence fee of 9220 from listeners further debate upon the cbcs policies is to be expected gordon graydon progressive con servative house leader r m j coldwell cjcf leader have asked the government for a statement of the resignation of llgen a l mcnaughton as overseas army commanders the demand was made in the light of a newspaper report quoting gen mcnaughton on his return to canada as saying there was nothing wrong with his health prime minister mackenzie king said the government wanted to givo the whole picture and that could best be done when nrmy matters were before the llouso on the war approp riation bill if the bill was not reach ed soon because the throne speech debate dragged on he promised set aside a day for discussion of tho mcnaughton matter london cpjohn maud food expert has been appointed to the staff of lord woolton reconstruction minister and win devote most of his time to ways and means of meeting food needs after the war apple tree pruning often misunderstood although pruning of apple trees has born practised from the earliest days of apple culture it is the one orchard operation that is most gen erally misunderstood in its practical application d s blair horticultural division dominion deportment of agriculture told the northumberland and durham apple- growers associ ation in a recent address orchard- ists were not entirely to blame he said because it was only wit it in the last quarter century that carefully planned experiments had been con ducted to study the effect of pruning upon tho growth and fruiting even today loading authorities could not agree on some of the minor details when pruning the grower should have a definite plan in mind whether the trees were young or old tho purpose of pruning tho young non- bearing tree was primarily to train or shqpe the tree so that the main scaffold branches would develop strong wideangled crotches capable of hearing fruit without breakage this training should develop n frame work capable of supporting heavy crops or fruit when the tree reached bearing age the aim in n commer cial orchard was not to produce a tree pleasing to tho eye but rather one that was commercially profitable within a reasonable period of time tlie main objective in pruning bearing trees was to prevent tho trees from becoming too dense so that sunlight could reach all parts of tho tree to assist in carbohydrate manufacture and tho coloring of the fruit also to facilitate orchard oper ations such as spraying thinning and picking another purpose was to re move weak growing wood throughout tho tree which never produced fruit of satisfactory size and quality with trees in full bearing pruning assismrd proper fertilizer applications nd other soil management practices in maintaining a good growth condition in the trei bridgetown cp the british west indian island of barbados is to send canada so 000 puncheons or fancy molasses from tho 1944 sugar crop lagos nigeria cp in accord ance with a recommendation of the ministry of supply rubber mission which recently visited nigeria sue forestry officers have been a to promote production in rubberpro ducing areas there london cp alfred ctactb brooks designer and producer of britains first a000 pound blockboster homh has been swarded the hae for outstanding service of a nature that cannot be revealed many i advice london cp the ministry of food reports increasbur number of men asuag information at its 28 ad vice centres scattered through tho country most of them are war- workers living in one room away from home carrolls 7 princess palmouve3 chip80 sp f red river 2es 15c 25c quaker oats ffik 19c olives mclrw siutm j 43c frvstjocoa 19c sic ww hwm tho right to limit quantities of all merchandise kllo- aixbran i- pk axe a 1uiu drink ovalttae jr sse 9se tender leaf tea mbpkg 40c aunt jemima pancake flour t ise 35c quakar muffet8 x pk i7e aylmwr imirdralml beans s s9e hwm piorwax4ses3e toop clonal drain s1nko tin asc on coupon blaeberries ftr sc on coupon for irirm jajr of molasses a fcr s7 two coupon aylmw bjlur ma r 330 aybimt giwa pea soup a tin 7e special california oranges size 220 per dozen new texas cabbage per lb fresh lettucef se s each 4 texas seedless grapefruit size 96 4 for 34c 6c 13c 25c fruit ud vecoubla prlom onlil saturday nlam oalr mmm hydro the way the foallor hydra towri striding ocrow ike chitrvldv or sysibollc of a ateot public entsrprue tftot hoscoatrlbuted m ucftlo tbavjop44acj ontario along the ttonssilnioo tins cotrled by isete towers vows tkepow tftot lesfttej tae wsyin atony tfeovtono of ikmttej indimfrls and forsu hydro power h sccenjhw if reoches out aaou the hw ell clty at the hip ot as k town or fane rsody to iwt hydro sewer hftrnxtbh h twm the wheels of our foctorlm mills and mines it weaves ow clot orlnda onraraln uks ow cowi pusips ow wots b tin our elsvotors wathes ow clothes refrigerates and cooks our food it lights our hostet runs our todies day and eight it serves ow needs in hundreds of diffsrent way hriro power h ewpeedshiw wsjiequlpped sssrgsi crews and repair qwlp stand by day and night ready h keep power rowing at all liases fryow pew h eseeoawfesl through the years it is owe factor e to ow everyday living that bar been consistently reduced in price hydro serves the psople to thousand of ways it brings ihem coetfort ease and conveelsece yot j hydros contribution to the welfare of the people up to now is but a preview ol the proebe which tho tectrlcal world hold for toeiorrow since war began hydro power hat been and will be ovolloblo wherever ond wh h is required by ontarios war tadustflss when peace cost uctrkity supplied by hydro will perform service that are certain to contribute much toward cfeotisg sew and of living this hwtspentible element feftnutt the wjy is everything t ow everyday we do kvvwisjvo y d r o lec1r power e o m m i s s ontario