Daily Times-Gazette, 22 Jan 1953, p. 18

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

#8 THE DAILY TIMEL-GAZETTE, 'Thursday, January 22, 1958 CANADIAN HOPES TO SELL SCOOTERS Hoping to capitalize on the pop- ularity of small cars, Canadian engineer Alvin Rhiando produced this motor scooter in which he is travelling through Europe and in- tends to continue through, Africa. The scooter, which he hopes to | market for about $450, is heated and has a two-way radio. Central Press Canadian Workmen Rush Church Repairs By STERLING SLAPPEY LONDON (AP)--London's sup- reme effort to rebuild war-dam- aged churches and remount their stately spires will be one-third complete when Coronation visitors flood Britain, 4 Nazi airmen and buzz bombs, whether or not they were aiming for London's churches, struck 624 of 701 Anglican churches, : The damage still is"evident in every section of the city, but after five years of labor, 200 restoration and repair jobs are nearly finished. . Among them are 15 famous Restoration work looks almost and carpentery of four and five centuries ago. St. James, Piccadilly, cost £125, 000 to restore and All Saints, Lang- ham Place, cost £120,000. Several other restorgtion 'pro- jects eventually will cost far more than construction of the original tensive research and study were needed before artists, master car- penters and masons could begin their work. The bill for restoration of war- damaged churches in London alone --not counting huge jobs in Coven- try, Plymouth, Southampton and dozens of other large British cities --will cost nearly £4,000,000. The British. government eventu- ally will meet about £3,000,000 of the London bill. Public subscrip- tion, church donations, bequests, fund-raising stunts and foreign contributions must raise the re mainder. exactly like the original masonry, buildings. In many instances, ex-|.. ¢ Old Smell = A popular theme of mine has been the lack of smell in a modern grocery store, John Gould writes in The Christian Science Monitor. I regret the package era when evrything smells alike -- a perfect blank "That locked-in goodness" is a wonderful thing, I suppose, but to anyone who can remember how the old village store commingled the flavors of the world in one articu- late aroma, the lack of smells to- day is probably a dubious improve- ment. You might as well have no argosies today, for all your nose gets of the world's gssempled goodies. PUDDING PROCEDURE So our family, assembled for the holiday, touched on this in a round-about fashion as we dallied at the table after demolishing Mother's bag pudding. It all ed when my sister, now a ely mdtroh with her four children, in- tercepted some of the acclaim that was being heaped upon Moth- er for the excellence of her pud- ding. It's a ritual, sort of, with our family, and the ccasional visit- or who eats Christmas dinner with us thinks we have a left-hafided way of saluting the cook. It always starts when she rolls the pudding from the pag and it settles in a ste cloud on the Lonsiene platter, "Oh dear!" says making as if & major pi had ust settled over mankind in general. You'd think, after 47 family Christmases, that Mother would get wise to our ways but she never has, and she recoils in alarm at this and assumes that something ails the pudding. "What's the matter?" she always ar Then, naturejly, we all act as if the trouble was so obvious that any dunce could see it a mile away, and about then Mother catches on and says, "Oh, get along with you ."' and the family joke is once more history. The pudding, of course, is. bigger and better and gorgeouser than ever before, and she never turned out a poor one | yet. But she always has this nega- | tive, if not pessimistic, approach | to the job, and she always makes the pudding as if she expected to spoil it somehow. Forget an in- gredient, maybe. HOW IT STARTED It all goes back to the early be- ginnings of such puddings when the ingredients were * picked up pound by pound and there wasn't a bit of it came in a handy, econ- omy-size, airtight package. Mak- A KAYE'S iY SPORTS WEAR ~7 33 SIMCOE ST. NORTH "WHERE QUALITY AND LOWER PRICES GO HAND IN HAND" Yes! We have reason fo crow about these low prices and the bargains awaiting you in our store, and we know you'll be pleased, too, so--come early. Bargains: like these don't lost long. Ladies' Winter COATS and STATION WAGON COATS LADIES' ALL-WOOL AND NYLON CARDIGANS | Regular 4.98 and 5.98 PUR PRICE 3. 88 TO CLEAR REGULAR 39.95 TO CLEAR 19.95 Ladies' Nylon House Dresses Guaranteed Washable 2.98 ~ 3.59 and All-Wool . PULLOVERS REGULAR 3.98 AND 2.98 Special Price See our Blouses for all occasions. All colors ond sizes. Regular 2.98 to 8.98! CLEAR BLOUSES beautiful selection' of TO AND 1.9 LADIES' SKIRTS For Daytime, Playtime and Evening! of Gabardine Wool and Taffeta Skirts. Regular 6.98 and up. See our rack PANTIES REGULAR 69¢ TO ol 4 «1.00 HALF SLIPS Lace trim. Small, medium and large. Regular 1.98. TO CLEAR 1.29 ) Watch for the operiing of Our .Shortie Coats and Suits Department ! Ladies' Coats, ALL-WOOL MITTS pone 1.98 ae 98° NYLON HOSE First Quality, -- 51 Gouge SPECIAL 89¢ * Watch for Yellow Price Tickets Mail Orders Orders Shipped Acc a Budget Prepaid Account You may open All Sales Final, No Refunds No Exchange AYE'S SPORTS WEAR 33 SIMCOE ST. NORTH, OSHAWA DIAL 3-3714 : ing the pudding was almost a prob- lem in trigonometry, and the chance for error was great. Later, wien we cut ihe pudding, sole body always says, "What a shame!" And after the nieces have been distributed around the table, somebody always tastes the pud- ding 'and says, "Not fit to eat!" Out of this Mother gets her quota of compliments in due time, and protests overmuch that she doesnt think, really, the pudding is as good as common. And this year, during the ritual, my sister edged in to volunteer wistfully that, "Well I seeded the raisins!" I don't know just how far back she reaches for that one. The im- plication was that she should share in the glory, because she had per- formed, too. A sister-in-law cim- ed in, "Did you keep whistling?" Mother said, "I couldn't whistle when I was a girl so they always set me where they could watch me." And then a grandson asked, "What are you talking about?" Well the whole thing may loosely. construed, but it seems to me the general picture looks good if you stand back far enough. There is something nice about the economy, speed, convenience and orderliness we've put into our lives ments. seeded raising all ready to stir in, makes a good pudding, too. There is also some- thing ' rich and rewarding about the mind's-eye picture of 'a pig- tailed miss, her Christmas dress covered with a pink pinafore, whistling her head off while she seeds the pudding raisins. It takes a pound of raisins to make this pudding, and the amount might easily diminish to penury if the child stopped whistling. Of course it was drudgery for the lass, and slave labor, and all that sort of thing. It all goes together if your pursue it enough. My mother learned to make this pudding by seeding raisins. In the early evening of her affairs I would be the last to say that her spirit was spoiled, her attitudes made irregular, or her greatness hampered by this childhood chore. I recall I wrote something here once about wood stoves, and all the modern housewives (or should I say homemakers?) unbraided my Ll +) Moots Constitution Conference OTTAWA (CP)--Donald Fleming f (PC--Toronto Eglinton) said Tues- day the government should re- convene as soon as possible the federal - provincial constitutional Jconference, adjourned from 1950. out that the nasty trucking of wood ashes, alone, was enough to give the, lie to my premise. That's a surfaced value. The truth is that Mother's bag puddng needs four hours of steady boiling, and with an old wood range and the fuel eco- nomy of the old farm, you have The conference was called orig- inally to work out a formula for making constitutional amendments without reference to the United Kingdom Parliament. Canada still must ack the TInited Kingdom to approve any constitutional chan. ges involving matters within joint jurisdiction of the federal and pro- ° |vincial governments. © Mr. Fleming spoke after Stan- ley Knowles (CCF -- Winnipeg North Centre) sponsored a bill to increase the quorum of the Com- mons to 30 from 20 members, Mr. Knowles said the present quorum was fixed when membership total- (led 181. Now the membership is "old-fashioned exuberance, pointing 262 While not quarreling with the aim of the bill, Mr. Fleming said it did call for a constitutional change. . Immigration Minister Harris, speaking for the government, said Mr. Knowles' bill will be referred be | life to the Commons committee on pro- cedure for consideration. By Gene Ahem such puddings, which enrich your ROOM AND BOARD Y. BUNNYS UNCLE IS A PIRE-ANGLASS EATER WITH A CARNY SHOW, AN' BUNNY TAKES AFTER HIM IN ACTOR'S TEMPERAMENT/- - 'HE'S AGAINST DA IDEA OF BEIN' A RASSLIN' CAVE MAN DRESSED IN A WOLFSKIN---HE THINKS IT'S BETTER TO BE FANCY LOOKIN' (3 NA RED VELVET HIMSELF, AND THAT'S BY THINKING! YOU TELL HIM TO STAY WITH THE MUSCLES AND FAT FROM HIS EHEAD DOWN, AND THE THINKING ON A J ROBE AN'SULTAN'S TURBAN 71GOROUS & WINEY BOKAR COFFEE 93 ibsssD.73 SAVE 6c CUSTOM GROUND a te COMPARE -8UY- SAVE JEWEL SHORTENING CHICKEN SOUP cua AsP PEACHES coc SALADA TEA Brown Label, Black Tea TER BAGS 501260 Orange Pekoe - CLARK'S SOUPS Ai varies SHREDDED WHEAT QUAKER MUFTETS TOMATOES ona CHOCOLATE CHIPITS ore hew, low Qveryday prices LY ¥ 1 3 rk: 29 2 15-02 tins 3 3 velb pkg Dae 60's box b&b. 3 tins 2c 2 pkgs 31 2 pkgs 27: 28-oz fin 19 6-0z pkg 27¢ Springvace Raspberry (Pectin added) IONA JAM Ogilvie Silver Our Own Special Blend AsP TEA . DEEP CUT SPECIALS! Amn Page MILK BREAD SLICED or UNSLICE® "14 WHITE OR BROWM @ 3 ior 9c Meoziar 3 3c pho 2c %hbbeg 3 3c GRAPE BROCCOLI Florida Pascal, No. 1, large size CELERY STALKS Bradford Marsh, Washed, Meo. 1 Florida New Fresh Green, Me. 1 Produce Specials! Florida Marsh Seedless, No. 1--96's 10- 49- Texas Frosh Green, appres. Wg ibs. per bunch Ontario Grown, No. 1, Hot Mouse, Strawberry food RHUB : BAKERY SPECIAL! Ann Poge Plein DONUTS «17 REG. Mec -- SAVE 4 ® CANDY SPECIAL! MIDGET AFTER DINNER MINTS 27. FRUIT bunch 29 "for 25: 3617. bp 8 2s 33 Red or Blue Brand Beef - Canada's Finest Grades LEAN MINCED BEEF excellent for Hamburg [b ' . Choice Grade A Grade A, Cleaned Ready for the Oven, 2% fo 3 Ibs. LOTS OF FREE PARKING | "mo -Diieny ACROSS THE Sraeer 704 WHITBY STORE YOUVE SEEN THE REST | | SEE THE BEST JANUARY SALE of ALL! t..HANN'S THE STORE OF SATISFACTION 'WE'VE SLASHED PRICES TO ROCK BOTTOM BUY NOW AND SAVE! Men's 'Dress Shirts SIZES 15 - 17 $1.00 2.PANT SUITS BIG VALUES $21.95 MEN'S HONEYCOMB- KNIT Swra'ers $2.39 Turtle & V-Neck ZIMMERKNIT DRESS SOX 3 Pairs for $1.00 MEN'S Sport Shirts $2.79 2 for $5.25 MEN'S STATION WAGON COATS $19.95 MEN'S PYJAMAS Stripes & Plains $2.69 CREAM-RIB Combina- tions $1.69 PICTURE BLA™KETS NOW $2.99 MEN'S DRESS . . PANTS » GABARDINE REG. 8.95 $4.49 ALL-WOOL o QUILTED LINED BOMBER JACKETS Now $1.95 MEN'S HEAVY DOESKIN - PLAID | SHIRTS NOW $2.99 BOYS' "MONARCH" Now $1.09 MEN'S SWEAT SHIRTS Warm Fleece Lined DRESS SHIRTS Now LENNARDS & ZIMMERKNIT SHIRTS or DRAWERS " $KI CAPS NOW 89¢ NYLON ALL-WEATHER TOPCOATS ZIP-IN LINING $21.95 ALL-wOOL WORK SOCKS 3pr. $1.00 BOYS' SANFORIZED. FLANNEL PYJAMAS $2.49 Sport Shirts $1.49 100% NYLON DRESS SOX NOW 69¢ AIRFORCE " MELTON PANTS $4.99 HORN BROS. TUFFY BLANKETS All-Wool $3.09 MEN'S GENUINE HORSEHIDE SUEDE JACKETS Now $16.95 DRIVERS' Ali-wooL QUILTED LINED JACKETS $7.95 DURABLE WORK SHIRTS Now BOYY EIDERDOWN '$3.49 BOYS' WARM LINED JEANS $3.29 Dungarees Sanforized $3.29 MEN'S Sleeveless SWEATERS Now $1.49 MEN'S HEAVY DENIM RIB OVERALLS $3.69 OF COURSE! THESE PRICES COULD ONLY OCCUR AT HANN'S 35 SIMCOE ST. N. DIAL 5-3822 THE STORE- OF 'SATISFACTION BUT HURRY! SALE LASTS ONLY UNTIL PRESENT, 3 STOCKS ARE GONE ! I!

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy