Grimsby Independent, 15 Jul 1936, p. 2

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This eddâ€"looking plane, the Hammond Â¥â€"1, is to Into construet federal tests of approval. te t landi % gblclh brakes, ferward of '.lnc: -in.mwu.::l;v ur:.'t:.:u nosing over, €450 dez. F.) 15 minutes. Makes 4% doten bermits. % cup granulated sugar. 2 egzs, well beaten. l“npnfln cup broken nut meats. Bift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder, sait, and spices, and #ift togetber three times. Cream the wally. fm-hgn'lt’l“lkfl ind fuf. t a uf« fy. Add eggs and beat thoroughly; then raisigs and nuts and mix well, Add flour gradually, mixing well. Drop from tedspoon on greased bakâ€" ing sheet and bake in moderate oven do anything but snarl in protest Posing for the camera doesn‘t click with this t '}"_!‘_"‘-gh;i_n Zeo in h’:‘huchn He‘s too small 4 cups of cider vinegar, 2 cups of brown sugar. 1 teaspoon of tumeric powder, 2, tablespoons of mustard. tley. Serves m ‘-‘-'A““l; ‘l H u. i‘i%i | dn is | 5* MEmaneok ls~ * ie > | met s * Â¥ 20 ears of corn. _ :nhhn. green peppers. 4 god sized onlons. 2 pounds round beef, ground. % cup quickâ€"cooking taplocs. 2% teaspoons salt. * teaspoon pepper. 2 cups strained tomatoes (Ju‘ce and pulp). Try out salt pork, add onion, and «eok until golden brown Add pork, enion, and drippings to other inâ€" wgredients ord mix thorvaghly. Bake in loaf pan in hot oven‘ (450 deg. P.) 15 minutes; then decrease heat to moderate (350 deg. F.) and bake 80 minutes longer, or until done. _.__htflutzufluuhh'Mpp savery, cold meat loaf from which the folks can make their own sandâ€" wiches, Add a loaf of nut bread and a jJar of cream cheeseâ€"the mak ings of more delicious sandwiches. “'ulhlm.:‘hfll.':ffl:‘h are easy to carry are all that «ould be desired. s Fill the hampers with casy.toâ€"make surprises for the hungry Put in a % cup butter ur other shortening. % cup brown sugar, firmly pack» 2 cups sifted cake flour, 2 teaspons baking powder &--u---x mm. 1 teaspoon cinnamon. 2 thin 2â€"inch sliees salt pork, Don‘t make a burden of picnics! % Homfi&évgcience Wild About Pictures! enlon. Looks Give Way to Safety Plainly write or prist out the inâ€" gredients and method and send it toâ€" gether wit hname and address to Home Hints, Reem 421, 73 'fl] Adelaide Street, Toronto, We will pay $1,00 on publication for the best salad dish or refresh ln! drink recipe recelved. 1 can sreen peas. 1 eaulifiower divided Into sections â€"â€"not too small. Several small radishes. ‘ Empty can of peas on a bed of lettuee leaves, moistened with dressâ€" Ing. Arrange caulifiower sections around this. Garnish with radishes. ;’-’"fl Daron, Bex 76, Cobden, t. ish sHees 4 eup grated raw earot. ‘t cup very finely chopped celery V"MI:”";INIV‘IH:!‘M 1% cup finely shredded ai chopâ€" l’.‘ grated onion. teaspoon Toss vegetables lightly together. Add mayonnaise to moisten. Arâ€" range on lettuce. Garnish with radâ€" HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Vegetable Salad } 1 bardâ€"boiled egg. 3 radishes. 1 small tomato. 1 or # tender carrots. ko $ chopped vegetables, eag w salad dressing. Serve on lettuce. Garâ€" ::i with parsley and thin slices .t‘ linh. 0: cold water makes a refresbing drink.â€"Miss Pearl Tesne Taylor, R. R 4. Hastings, Ont. bottle for use. A large tablespocn ful or a little more added to a glaw Grate the rind of three oranges, jJuice and rind of three lemons. 9 cups of white sugar, 6 cups of water. Two ounces citric acid. Halfâ€"ounce tartarie acid. 4 ounce Epsom saits. Dissolve the sugur, add the other things, let stand all night. Drain and Cut corn from ears. Chop the cabâ€" bage fine, also pepper and onions, and cook all sléwly together for a few minutes. Can while boiling hot. 1% eups very firely dieed cucum THIS WEEK‘$ WINNERS tiger go into construction at San Francisco follow er kitten however, to pusher propeller and ca‘ 'l'hbuv:l' was desizned to fact that he kegeg â€"./ Ariz., waitre has 4. lbu.'l-(':lo'::mv B. l.mmn to marry R':lul tc‘l- rane, !I‘. an n‘m. .-h is under sentence of death 'lor b::-: urde Phoeni *'- with m m i roun 'nlnfl-nm. where he has been confined fa» m;'-l'.:: is Theima Martin, 25â€"yearâ€"old Phoenix, Ariz., waitress. has Poetic License or the Postry of Motion? advertisement owner of Par specializes in Till Death Do Part with C in} deat m“md:_h‘.o;-&«‘;: at (the symbolis *, France, book poetry. D t > 56 \ .J,"” 3’ & s E* e ?\",.‘ ‘.\ 7 m "‘fr 1| i 2 Mc $\ 4 * Polky 2. m * LI f will “./ ‘ U . **.. ‘v J f A, ’ .. -:."‘i’ z> _-..\‘ ‘ 7 g h'f'* | os> . _4 . ‘g )Q.. iA P hants 23 '\ PE k . 2 1 6 P a Faciy y m Th Presenting the Award for Ouistanding Achievement in Aviati rher, not quite clear) to call attention awarded each year to an individual for nehlevement in aviation, is prese (o4 as by President Roosevelt in the White House for his twinâ€"engined coremercial sh p. :.“;-'-mndmu.munm. relal «hp never fi 1 think my . corvespondent â€" shoutd try to forget herself and cultivate the social side of life. Priendliness atways begets friendliness, and one . who showe se Wighdly spicit vsually finds & friendly spirlt returned, _ Perhaps who could get a good innings by Jook: ing for someone who is in trouble and then Il'lu}u """".‘""“l "ith the temperature steadily risin= to establish new heatâ€"wave records, Port of London authority policc, wearing full uniform, inâ€" eluding overconts, sweltered in 4he sun before Jumping into the West India docks to officially test the new life beits and !ifeâ€"saving -mhflohh.flmo“hpflnm.vufl-th“w' life saving waistcont over their full uniform, nre seen here getting an "official" ducking. them "I came with my husband to this town a few years ©20," writes a lndy correspondent, "and 1 find it just !mâ€" possible to make friends. 1 don‘t know whether 1 am at fuult or my nelghbours, but 1 have no desire to go out among the people for they do make me foel 1 am not wanted. it is all so strange to me for, in the place we came from 1 had many good and real friends." With the temperature lorget a real kindness, and a A Stranger Within PROBLEMS OF EVERY DAY LIFE dueking New Lifebelts Tested :'M“mhvn- NOTE: The writer of this column is a trained psycholrgist and an auâ€" ther of several works. He is willing to deal with your probler and give you the bencfit of his wide experience. Questions _ regarding _ PROBLEMS OP PVERY DAY LIFE should be adâ€" dressed to: Dr. M. M. Lappin, Room 421, 73 Adclaide Street West. Toâ€" Ing you do not want snything to do with theis. They may even think that you imagine yoursel! to be better than you are; and, if they get that noâ€" tion about you. they certainly . will shun you. You must not give them that fdea. Go out among them . by «l means. It is all a matter of read« mummr-numnvm‘ ment â€" and mo one can do that but Why not join some local society or elub and get to know some of the people? If you keep yourself penned up and do not "mix" with the people, you can hardly blame them for think» "I have no desire to get out among people at all," writes my correspondâ€" ent, and that is one of the first things she ought to change. Sbe can never know what the people are fike until she does go out among them. and if only she would go out among them she would probably find there are many nice folks in the community â€"â€" folks with whom she could make real friends. kindness shown ofter leads to lasting friendship. Gird of youth." That Then Our M. Me and Dr Clinle found that t gail b ther t Two sets of experimenters. . work inz independently, announced use ot the "speedomoter" «imuitaneovsly in the Journal of the American Medical Association, The other experimenters â€" Dr. J. M MeCowan, Dr. Winfleld L. Butscb, With The meter was placed inside the body, attached to the tube which car ries bile from the liver to help break down fatty foods. In effect it messus. «d the flow of bile new data last week on the rate of the flow of a digestive flaid in man. it showed that laughter "steps on ‘the gas" and apparently speeds up digesâ€" CHICAGO, â€"â€" The first "speedoâ€" meter" ever to be hitched to . the human digestive system gave stlence Shows Laushter Helps Disestion Meter Placed Inside Body Gives Science Some New â€"Data With "They hang about themseives." she adds "vells, scarves, frills, contrapâ€" tlons of straw or cloth upon their heads, covering or biding their love» ly hair." The Chinese girl never does wear "these dreadful extras," . and nothing covers her black, silken, polâ€" ishod hatr. She never wears a hat â€"â€" pever. On Miss Davis, who is an Engliswoman declares that British and Freach woâ€" men, "eut their clothes in odd pleces, vary the natural waist, and disguise the beauty of their bodies with bulky material." The Shangbal dress worn by Chinâ€" e«n girls and women everywhere, has a bigh closed collar, with short and tight sleeves. The dress is long, reachâ€" Ing below the ankles, and is cut to fit the figure with no walst band. Atâ€" though the style never varies, variety is secured by bright co‘ours, and an underalip of contrasting shade which peeps through the split sides. ith childâ€"fa dreams g We stand, © Nif h ‘pon life‘s half done | Bestâ€"Dressed ‘\ _ Women in World dressed women in the world today, and the Shanghal dress is the loveâ€" h. : style yet invented. Not all _ the dressmakers of London, Paris and alro New York have evolved a more useful or more fiattering frock. "All Chincse women wear a uniform and all their dresses are cut in the same style for day or evening wear, They need no fashion beoks. . They* pay no exhorbitant prices for exclusive models. Year after year they wear gowns of one pattern â€"â€" the Shangâ€" hal type. But what a marvelious deâ€" slgo. and what beauty and grace they achieve." L ovag SR Res | dreased except when they occasionaiâ€" lyuuon*-mddn.u-l.- plicity. They have much to learn from the East about discarding trimmings, scquiring easy poise and grace . of movement." This criticism of modern Evre bas been made by Miss Helen M, Davies, a Singapore fashion expert, who holds that the best dressed women are not the English or the Prefich, but the Chinese, "Only one race of women," she says, tare never untldy, never fussed or bothered in appearance, and alwaya perfectly dressed, shod, immacelate as to fuce, hands and bair and have a perfect carriage and charming moâ€" dest manners. They are the chinese. ‘The Chinese women are the best up your 1 might and . nd taste m i more where aver f like new and . us, one friends to desis naked the a bladde then < where birds ho wer mountains hath klssed ; glare and hen Westerners Have Much to Learn from the ;.ad. Acâ€" cording _ to _ $ ngapore Fashion Expert. Por > desist from t} volee, Int mot. this . Waltham W at Rochester through | siz like r striin accepted -MM“I. r operations, 1 decreased pain Manhocd and hent e rum blank pla * by one, * drop ow > unbound truth. the faith gone sun + dusty strong ; rejJoice, men ye main, . E284 richer wine than that stray br similar plain dead like anaesthotle out ilters. Minn which souls, through bear the seeing . and ye mist, beneath and thetle in Increased while d.â€"1. Butsch, of the Mayo â€" said they experiments car the rings the dawn qult you on wth youth round life‘s must out the

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