Grimsby Independent, 4 Nov 1943, p. 3

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it / t To make the lemon sauce, wash a lemon, grate the peel, add exâ€" tnctcdjulee.lwpm.atewgmudun.lcupboum‘nwr. mmmmmxmwmnmdfim 1 cup cold water. Cook the sauce until transparent, add a small piece of butter and serve hot. â€" mwnlddnm%madndm.‘nudmung and allspice, and work it into the mixture. ‘Then add * teaspoon bakâ€" mmxmpmmmxmwmm Stir the mixture well and pour into 2 greased pudding mould, wover and place in steamer, Let it cook for three hours. Slice and serve hot with leinon ‘sauce. What about a succulent, nourishing suct pudding for dessert while the cold spell lnasts? Steamed suet puddings and dumplings beâ€" long to the Age of Comfort, almost lost to use these thirty years or more until the exigencies of the present war brought it back, along with lanterns instead of flashlights, a wood fire in the kitchen range, and the horse and buggy. _ ___â€" Â¥You‘ll need half a cup of crumbled suet, and be sure it is fresh. Next, 1 cup each of grated potato and carrot. Add 1 cup sugar and 1 «up flour to the potato and carrot. The suet goes in next. Mix 4 teaâ€" It was a fine autumnal day; the sky was clear and serenc, and mature wore that rich and golden livery which we always associate with the juea of abundance. The forests had put on their sober brown and yellow, while some trees of the tenderer kind had been nipped by the frosts into brilliant dyes of orange, purple and scarlet. Streaming files of wild ducks began to make their appearance high in the air; the bark of the squirrel might be heard from the groves of beech and hicâ€" koryâ€"nuts, and the pensive whistle of the quail at intervals from the neighboring stubble field. The small birds were taking their farewell banquets. In the fullness of their revelry, they fluttered, chirping and frolicking, from bush to bush, and tree to tree, capricious from the very profusion and variety around them. ‘There was the honest cockrobin, with its loud and querulous note, and the twittering blackbirds flying in sable clouds; and the goldenâ€"winged woodpecker, with his crimson crest, his broad biack gorget, and splendid plumage; and the cedarâ€"bird, with its redâ€"tipt wings and yellowâ€"tipt tail and its little monteiro cap of feathâ€" ers; and the blue jay, that noisy coxcomb, in his gay light blue coat and white underclothes, screaming and chattering, nodding, and bobbing, and bowing, and pretending to be on good terms with every songster of As Ichabod jogged slowly on his way, his eye, ever open to every sy mptom of culinary abundance, ranged with delight over the treasâ€" ures of jolly autumn. On all sides he beheld vast stores of apples, some hanging in oppressive opulence on the trees; some gathered into baskets and barrels for the market; others heaped up in rich piles for the cider press,. Farther on he beheld great fields of Indian corn, with its golden cars peeping from their leafy coverts, and holding out the THE WOMAN NEXT DOOR Looks At Us, At Our Town, A At The World. Treasures Of Jolly Autumn Good Old Suet Pudding Thursday, November 4, «â€"= UYy HOLLIG â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Fromâ€"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Buch a person is Harry O‘Brien, known to many of us through his delightful column in Better Homes and Gardens. Harry was born and brought up on a fearm in Ohio, and put himsel? through Obilo State University. He now has at least five jobs; nobody knows how many more, For the last twentyâ€"seven years he hnns been writing farm pleces for Country C:atliemen; he lectures to garden clubs throughâ€" out the United Statez: he teaches a course in technical jJonnalism at Ohio State University, and he uns his Mour o‘Clock Nursery. They say he can stand in the middle of a sornfield and, withovt msoving, absorb all the information within a redius of Awenty miles. But let bis* tell it himself, "Not long aro," says Harry, "I climbed a ladder to interview an Hiinois farmer on top of a barn. I‘ve talked with farmers inskie sllos, atop tbreshing machines, alongside sllag» eutters. sacther timel left my car in the _«rayard and rode to town on a load o# wheat, and back agrin, in order to ask my questior=, ‘Then there was the time I weut to see a farmer and fours him at work making reâ€" pairs Inwide a cloverâ€"sood buller, HMe was too busy to come out, and I stood outsids and shouted my questions. ‘The answers came back from s man 1 couldn‘t see â€"â€" and buven‘t seer to tw day In Chicago ons day Harry was in the midst of an interview with a furmâ€"organizeian official, when it caume time for the victim to leave on a *rip to Nobraska. Hary pickâ€" ed up his bag and won! along, conâ€" and gentle him when young, he beâ€" comes the town gossip. If his inâ€" -uncumwoplfly'nbumudu develops, inevitably, into a magaâ€" zine or newspaper reporter. ‘This bit of philosopuy from Country Gentleman. Now and then the human assemâ€" bly line turns out a man (or woâ€" man) who sops up information as a sponge sops up water. Unless Busy Man For south rooms with plenty of sun the blues and greens are pleasâ€" antly cool Here red or yellow should appear only as accents, bits of contrast. Large areas should be restful. ‘The larger the amount used, the quieter the color should be; the smaller the amount, the more striking the contrast may be. For a really restful room, one that is a real sanctuary from the world today, many experts recomâ€" mend walls, floors and large pieces of furniture be made a quiet backâ€" ground for more colorful draperies, lamp shades, pictures, small chairs, bookshelves and maybe pottery or Bright green plants, just foliage or the flowering variety, go weil in any room and groupedâ€"together on a stand or table near the winâ€" dow introduce a happy livedâ€"in note. (One of the prettiest and most restful rooms we kmow hss »beige. ‘The sofa is covered in dusâ€" ty rose striped fabric, and a big chair is upholstered in a pattern of burgundy and dusty rose. White lamps and green plants add addiâ€" tional beauty to this room. Linoleum Found By Accident _ Linoleum was discovergd, or more properly invented by acciâ€" dent, nearly 100 years ago. ‘The English chemist, Fredes.ck Waliton was engaged in experiments to imâ€" prove the floor covering of those Spending a great deal more time in the home, as most of us are doâ€" ing these days, enables us to anâ€" walls and woodwork paiu.ed a soft, dusty rose, the rug is a roseâ€" tinuing to fire at pointâ€"blank range in the Pullman smoking room as the train hooted its way across Tlinois and Iowa., At Omaha, with assorted information . practically running out of his ears, he disemâ€" barked and boarded the next train back to Chicago. What in exciting life! All the thrills are not on the war front, by any means. Use of Color In Decoration and background more critically, _ Usually we find that color is the ance with a room, and frequently a switch in draperies or alipcovers, a change of pictures or accessories makes all the difference in the pressing as a hodgeâ€"podge of color lllnlhth..ndyuwm-m rooms that are gullty of one or the other failing. If floor and walls are in solid color then there may be leeway in patterns and colors for drapes and uphoistery, but if the Loor covering is patterned, and the with little sunshine, warm colors such as shades of red and yellow give an iNusion of sunshine, while cool greens, blue, white or gray will appear cold, depressing and uninviting. However, these colors mixed with a little red or yellow become warmer. nn-dnmln.pwm. then go slow with draperies and with little Eliclént and mobile are many of the recent creations of home appliâ€" ance desigzers The top skeich shows an electrical water heater Tuee "a seuite a ‘Alue ‘which 6 is pictused a Alter which wracts soot. may b_-w_uh_‘u".hcm skeich shows a modern lamp l At'â€" or a room THE GRIMSBY INDEPENDENT #9\ ie dn rocscncrie ces Aew "pa h e rem en eninenrncommemmn hm "wneiP 3 day» One day be absentâ€"mindedly lifted a piece of dry paint from the top of an open can. All at once he realized that he had something in this lump of dried paint. Looking into the matter, the chemist found the substance was nothing more or less than linseed oil exposed to air. ‘That was the beginning of linoâ€" Around the corner and down the street come members of the unique and popular Canadian Woâ€" men‘s Army Corps Pipe Band and the C.W.A.C. Military Band, the latter the only allâ€"gir; active force band in the British Empire. Stirring tunes of the pibroch and brass as played by women drew treâ€" mendous audiences or. their Eastern tour, The bands will open the Western tour at Winnipeg, September Nowadays, after linsced oil is alniiine caumonr or Coony, Lt @p Containuten in soproat of tht rIPte nctoRy Load CalbAlgs 3t C.W.A.C. Pipe And Brass Bands On Tour oxidized, it is mixed with a kind ow gum, and cooked in immense caulâ€" drons. Cork and colour pigments are added. When the mixture beâ€" comes a fluffy soft mass, it is poured on a base where immense rollers finish the job, ‘This "green" linoelum is hung up in ‘ightly sealâ€" ed rooms at 150 degree. Fahrenâ€" heit for several weeks to age. It eventually comes out of retirement «~AFIER THE WAR SAVE NOWâ€" BUY BETTER THE PORCHASE OF VICTORY DONDS AND WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES RELPS STAVE OFf NFLATION NOW â€"AND A SLOMP LATER 27. Topâ€"is the pipe band on parade during their visit to Halifax. Pipe Major Lillian Grant, of Vic» toria, B.C., leader of the band is at the left of the front row. Bandmistress Nadia Svarich, of Vegreâ€" ville, Alta., is pictured at the left in the lower photo marching with the military band in Halifax.â€"Canâ€" adian Army Photo. as ah attractive floor covering. When linoleum floor is dirty, wash it with a mop or floor cloth wrurg out of a mild soapy soluâ€" tion, never with a harsh soap. Aftâ€" er the foor has been cleansed, two thin conts of a good liquid wax, if availabi«, can be applied. ‘The secâ€" ond coat should be polished before it become® dry, THREE

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