Flesherton Advance, 3 May 1950, p. 4

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wpl iBVednesday, May 3. 1950 THE Hesherton Advance PaUUicd on CoUingwood St^ rUihtr' â€" . Wcdnaiday of Murh wmk. CircuUtion 1,100. Prioa $ZO0 a yua io Canada, paid in adMBca; #2.90 par yaar in tba Unit*d Sutat. PL J. THURSTON, Editor THE i<LESHERTO^ ADVANCE "Wen, Dinah, what does the doc- tor say ig Wie matter with you.?" "Why ho tells me dat I'm augerin' from hardenin' of de artillery, an' Ian' sakes, I aint even been neah an ah my camp," "Your hair is getting thin on top," ruuirked the barber. "Have you ba«n usin^ our Sweedish tonic?" •'No;,'' replied Mt. Pinkdome. "It PMB*t thnt." Joe, the window washer, fell all the way from the 42nd floofr, and a ni'ighjbor cam« in to oomifort the widow. Nei'ghbor: "Did Joe leave y*"* any- thing." Widow: "Six thousand dollars." Neig-hbor: "Think of that!? Six thousand dollars and he couldn't read or write 1" Widow: "Or fly." FARM-HOME INSULATTION CO. GENERAL CONTRACTORS â- Blown Rock Wool Insulation Roofing , Insul-Brick Siding fro Schools, Churches, Home and Industrial Buiildings Flesherton, Ont Phone 109 or writei for free estimates Starting Sunday, April 30th \ I Gray Coach Lines Buses « 1 will run ON^DAYLIGHT TIME 12.03 p.m. Sunday and Holiday trip to Owen Sound will be at 11.38 a.m. other times between Owen Sound * Flesherton - Toronto will remain unchanged GRAY COACH LINES THI SOURCE OF Here is a typical bank managerâ€"- 43, married, with a growing if family. He is active in IPJ^ community affairs. When he ""^ joined the bank as a junior, he was 17, just out of high school. He soon moved up. By his late twenties he was accountant in his branch. â-  He worked hard. All the time he was learning about banking, about Canada, too, in various branches, different aieas . . . learning to know peopleâ€" their hopes, fears, problems â€"the importance of the human factor. At 36 he was branch manager. Now he haa another, larger branch. And his way to advancement is still open. His general manager started as a junior, too . . . and carried with him to the top the busineaa experience and human understanding gained along the way. iPONSORED BY YOUR BANK •" BOWl Hello Homemakei-s! I dont know where the time has gone today, and maylbe you have aid the same thing .ind iiave been wondering where you can take a few short cuts. So to help both of us it has been deceided to review a few baker's tricks that we will use in meal preparation. In the first palce, re-arranging your equipment may ibe£ a big help. Collecting utensils and supplies be- fore) you begiin the job is the best methoid of getting the ejob done quickly. While you're mixing a cake or maping the salad, think of wayi? you can do thai pai-liicalai- job faster. TAKE A TIP of the Department of Agrioult\tre, On new methods of canning fruits, vtigetubles, meat and chicken, which was most interesting and educative. About 27 ladies were present, ^^ cl. ling a carload /rom the Flesner- ton branioh. The adies served a bountiful lunch at the close and a social hour was enjoyed. Mr. Emerson Meads has returned, after spending a week in the Centre Grey Hospital. Mrs. Stephens spent tiie week end with friends in Owen Sound.;; Mrs, T. Nalchol ig visiting wdth her daughter, Mrs. D. A. Mclntyre, at Mclntyre. Rev. Mr. Laird of Toronto occu- pied the pulpit in JSt. Andrew's ChuTch the past two Sundays and gave inspiring ermoiis.' 1. To bake cupcakes. Use paper cups in muiffn tins when you are making drop cakes. A one-quar- ilter kneasuring cup spoons out the right amount of batter and makes each cake the same size. 2. To aeaosn and hour meat. Put the ciibed meat and a little sea- soned flour in a paper bag, sake the bag â€" ^the job's done. 3. To make crokuett s. Chill the imiixeture, pat the mix flat. Cut out rounds with cookie cutter â€" this keeps servings uniform in size and shape. 4. To bull strawberries. Use a tea- spoon to hull berries. It does good work and it saves you time. Wash the berries before stemm- ing so no uavor will Ibe lost. 5. To decorate a cake. Siprfead cake smoothly with creamy frosting, then dimple it with a broad spat- ula. Or make deceorative ridges with fork tines. Keep a cup of hot water handy while you ice a cake and dip spatula or fork into ihot water as you decorate cake. 6. To shell cooked eggs. Cool eggs quSckly under cold running water, crack shells then roll egg on table till throughly cracked. Start shelling at large end. 7. To collect ingredients and uten- sils Use a tray. Then, too, a tray- is handy o carry siilverware and polish to table and convenient for the cleaning job. Trays also save many trips in setting and clearincr a table, taking nearl.v everj-thing in one trip. 8. Use your large paper bags to - line your kitchen sani-mn, Be- sides making the garbage much easier to collecet, the paper keeps the can an better condition. 0. Dooible the recipe f cream sauce and put half of it in the refrig- erator for ready use. Put dry bread crumbs through the mirtcer instead of grating them. Cook supper dishes in damekins and serve in rameefcins â€" sav»s dishwashing and foods are kept really hot. 12. Avoid opening oven door too frequently. Foods do not brown evenly and reqeueire extra cook- ing time. 1.'?. Scrape dashes immediately, usinpf a riibber scraper. Rinse under faucet, swishing with brush. Use cold water for egg, cheese or starch mixtures; hot water for anything sticky or greasy. Wipe greasy skillet with paiper itowellimg or newspappr. Soak pans as soon as empty. Stand sticky cutlery, handly upright, in a bowl of warm water. IK. Always stack dishes â€" according to size. Place dishes and uten- sils at the Slink side in the order you are going to use them. To save changing sudsy water, wash dishes in this order â€" glasses, silvereware, plates, icups, then pans. Ifi. Use watere n.s hot as hands can stand. If you are right handad yoai will have time and motions if your washing water is at the right, dish drainer; on the left. The right hand handles the dish- l cloth, the left hand places clean dishes onto rinsing racl<. Then the tray should he ready for the dried dishes. Two towels, onp in ai'h hand saves time as on© in leift iiibsorbsi drips thai lu'oessi- tiato.s mopping up the floor. 17. If posaiiblo, arrange to store the dishes as they are dried to »ave time and motion. FEVERSHAM Mr. and Mrs. Fred Boyce of CoU- ingwood spent the week end with her parent?. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Tyler. 'Mt. and Mrs. Wm. Fadden, Ja<ikie, GwendoTyn and boy frtend visited friends over the week end. iMr. and Mrs. Hanry Montgomery and daughters of Dundalk visited on Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Lone. Mrs. Annie Ditson of CoUlngtwood spent the week end with her undea and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hudson and John Hudson. Mr. and Mm. Joe Armstrong, Mr. and Mrs. C«wl Armstrong and child- ren of ^niombury visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Ottewell. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Short visited a few days with their daughter, Mrs. Ernie Morrison, at CoUingwood. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Osborne and Marie of Dundalk visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Heitman. Mr. Chester Long and Bob visited on Sunday with Mrs. Long, who is a patient in the General Hospital at Guelph., Mr. and Mirs. Chas. Turner visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Willard Benson, Rock Mills. Mrs. Ben Short and sons of To- ronto visited with her sisters over the week end. 10, 11 Feversham Public SchcxJ Grade 8 â€" Melville Wright, Dor- othy Fenwick, Stanley Wright, ab- sent through illness: Norris Moore, Merle McMullen, John Stewart. Grade 7 â€" Stephen Eby, John Ped- lar, Gerald Teeter. Grade 6 â€" Shirley Sammons, Tony Parsonage, Cheryl Lig'ht, Evelyn Pedlar, Velda Teeter, Shirley Wright absent. Grade 5 â€" Joan Short, Joan Par- ker, John Sled, Gene MdMullen, Rob- ert Jackson, Clai'e Blackburn. Gmde 4 â€" Leola Sairanons, Elea- nor Sled, Irwin Stewart, Ann Ran- dall, Carman Wright. Grade 2 â€" Carl Jackson, J. D. Smith. Grade 1 â€" Diane Parsonage, Diane Moore, Fay Blackburn, Gayle Light, Patsy Sweeney, Barbara Hallam, Dorothy Pedlar, Sharon Sled, Robin Plummer, Gi-ace Hawton. Names in order of merit; No. on roll 44; average attendance 37.71. â€" Mrs. F. J. Seeley, Teacher 14. Full line of DEARBORN IMPLEMENTS FOR SPRING SEEDING TILLERS TANDEM DISCS BUCHLER CULTIVATORS 14- Plate Massey-Harris Inthrow Disc 2-Furrow Massey-Harris Gang Plow John Deere Mower 13-Tooth Horse-drawn Cultivator Reconditioned I^crd-Ferguson Tractor and Plow, good as new 1 â- A > I Ford and Monarch Dealers Phime 20 J . FLESHERTON X X POULFRYIWANTED â€" MARKETS ARE FIRM ON POULTRY "^ We are paying top prices for poultry. Call us before disposing of your fowl. Dundalk Formers' Co-op. Creomery i Phone 66 Dundalk, reverse charges I- '♦•••♦♦0»00»»^»»»»»»»0»«»0»0>0»»0<<ll>»*«<>«*0»C» 8 «- lnternat!onal Harvrester TRUCKS TRACTORS FARM EQUIPMENT TBUCKS ON HANDâ€" 1 KBS 7, 6-speed transraossion and D. P. axle*. l.Uaed 1946 Half -ton Pick-up. 1 Used 1938 2-ton Stake, new motor. USED CARSâ€" 1947 Custom Dodlge Sedan, fluid drive. Maw is the time to order your Farm Equipmoit for Sprtac Delivery, as the sapply is limited. H. H. SAYERS GARAGE Repairs to all makes of Tractors and Farm Maehinery Phone 51 DUNDALK 01»»«# â- 4 * â- * t ♦ 4 -n 99. Iff -r i â- ^ Iff V" â- Â«â-  I I ♦ f ♦^♦«<>'«44h>«nV«h>«<.«««4>«^4n>.>.>««4hX>«>4n>««««4«0«««««|» SWINTON PARK Mrs. Angus McDougal and son, Cliffoi'd,' of Monteith spent a week at the home of Earl Lane. Miiss Agnes Heard of Toronto spent a week at the home of Ed. Heard. Mr. Morris Northcote of Guelpn College is assiisting Mr. Edwin Fo.v- ler for the summer months on the fa mi. Next Sunday Will be Rural Sun- day at Salem Church, when Mr. F. R. Oliivev will be the guest speaker. Service at 3 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Porter spent the week end at the home of John ' Porter. \Vn are glad to hear that Wm. MtCopinick feeling much better in thi> Centre Grey Hospital. Quite a number from our vicinity iittonded the sale in Prioeville held liy Mr.-i. Mary McLean. PRICEVILLE Mrs. Alf. O'dell is a patient in the Owen Sound haspital. All hope for a complete recovery. Mr. CoKn Mcl^ean, wlio has spent the winter months with his family in Toronto, returned home Saturday and was accompanied by his son, InniH, wlho s.peret the week end here. Misses Isabel Karstedt and Fraii- (•es Reily of Toronto st>«nt the week end in the village. Mrs. Mary Molx^an of Toronto had II very successiful sale of household effects on Saturday in the villag->, when good prices were realised. A demonstration was hel<l Fri<lay afternoon in th" W. I. hall, by Miss Rai'hara Brondfoot, representative MAXWELL Visitors with Mr. and .Mr^. Me! Slfd ou Sunday were: Mr, an J Mrs. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Nick Hodson ,'iid Gari-y of Collingw -od Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Buckingham i.i'' (1 ildren of Stayner v.ited with Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, E. Buckingham on Sunday. Visitors \N*itii the Gi"uniniett fam- ilies on Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. John Irwin of Meaford, Mr. and Mrs. ('Iiester Mills and Mrs. Mills Sna-., of Dundalk. Mr, and Mi's. Harry Parkins of Itognor, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Rusisell Mid .Mas. Edna Russell of Rook Mills and Mr. Joh" Wilkinson ixf I'ortlaw visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kon- w'lk on Sunday. ;» * A ^mtlf all the people who work for the telephone company, And all the people who earn a living by making the things^ the telephone company needs, And all the people who have their savings investtd i» th* telephone company, And all the people who depend on good telephoH* ttrvit* to rum their businesses and manage their homes; If all these people, with their families, lived in one cHy, This City-With-No-Name would be by far the Ingest kt Canada, and one of the largest in the world. Kaaplng pom wMi Ifc* trowina »aUt af ti w MalHt •vaiywhtr* f*r tmmn md baltar Hl«>h»ii» mtvIm Im* takM Utt •! wwk and bti af iMiMy. Oaly â-  flnanclally liMMy nl»|ili»â€" cmmmv c<m mm M «Mi bla |*b. ' , Talaphaat UMr«, amipiayMt, »li«f halakct â€" avaiyâ€" Ims' m vital Intaraal in â-  Mrvl«( rttal m*«MM t« wnA !• Id* waMar* al la many ptapla. THI lELL TELEPHONE ff^M.! COMPANY OF CANADA Ownwt ami •p*taHd by Caitmdkmi ft CanatKona *â- 

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