The Oshawa Times, 22 Aug 1961, p. 7

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these good-tasting candies use cocoa sweetened toasted rice cereal. Roll them in flaked or | shredded coconut for a fimish- ONE SIM P L E confection teens enjoy putting together and then putting away is Date Delights. Made in a skillet, COOKIES CHOCOLATE WONDERS |down with floured fork. Bake in 1 cup butter or margarine a slow oven from 13-15 minutes. "cups white sugar Yield -- about 6 dozen cookies. tbsps. cocoa Mrs. Lloyd Weiderick, 15 cup milk Gertrude Colpus H and § Assoc. i boil in a saucepan, . boil fos roe minutes and then, COCOLATE ARROWROOT let cool about 15 minutes. ? ~ COOKIES Mix in another bowl: Place in double boiler: 3 cups fine rolled oats : eggs 11% cups coconut 4 cup white sugar 15 cup raisins or walnuts thsps. cocoa tsps. salt piece of butter Mix this together with the in- Mix and beat all together, gredients in pan. Drop from|cook and stir over boiling water spoon on waxed paper sheets to till thickened. Roll coarsely ap- cool. Makes about 5 dozen. proximately % 1b. arrowroot Mrs. J. Dewell, cookies and add with 14 cup Vincent Massey H and § Assoc. chopped nuts. Stir in and pour onto wax paper and press down RICE KRISPIE SQUARES evenly. Ay with ond in icing. 1%; cup syrup Mrs. M. E. Chesher 14 cup white sugar YUE, (WE He ' . texnlv Dorcas Group, Hest only till sugar dissolved, First Baptist Church. Pinch salt GUM DROP COOKIES 2 6 2 | 2 2 ing touch, or, for variety, use finely chopped nuts or choco. late shot to coat the confec- tions. Serve them with frothy root beer or ginger ale floats. 1 cup quick cooking rolled oats 14 tsp. vanilla Grease an 8' square cake tin Preheat oven to 375 deg. Mix sugar, baking powder and rolled oats. Add vanilla to melted butter and blend with dry ingredients. Press mixture into greased pan. Bake 8 - 10 {minutes until a golden brown real feelings . . |love and admire him. We've| § (minutes. Cut into fingers while/often had long talks and have a wonderful brother-sister re-|; color. Allow to cool in pan 5 still warm. Remove from pan before cold. Yield 21 bars. Mrs. M. E .Chesher, Dorcas Group, First Baptist Church. Charm, Freshness In London Styles For Coming Season LONDON -- The autumn col- lections of London's top design: ers show a sharp divergence to tsj. vanilla scant cup peanut butter cup rice krispies cup corn flakes cup butter cup white sugar cup brown sugar cups oatmeal 1 1 1 2 Mix ingredients Hioroughly 2 eggs Press into greased 8" x from the {rend sloppiness while still giving suits and over- coats the feel of luxurious ease and relaxation. The following showings were viewed: Cava- nagh, Amies, Hartnell, La- square pan. Cut in squares tof serve. Mrs. John Walter, South Courtice H and S Assoc. 1 2 Ya % 1 cup coconut 14 cup walnuts cup cooking gum drops cups flour tsp. salt tsp. baking soda tsp. baking powder chasse, Stiebel, Micheal, Mattli, | Creed. Suits have shorter skirts, but | they swing with a lilt, sometimes | pleated. Autumn and winter dresses MARY HAWORTH'S MAIL | Suramer Sandwich | Dear Mary Haworth: I mar- R ried into a wonderful family. 1 adore my mother-in-law and more if he were my own blood brother. The thorn-with-the-rose is his fiancee. She doesn't fit in. She is from an enormously wealthy, socially prominent family and is completely set against coming here to live. She makes sar- castic remarks about our town and its social life, at which I smoulder as if personally in- sulted. Mary and Ray have been en- gaged to be married for three years. Meanwhile, I had hoped he would find someone sweeter, but time is running out. He will graduate from law school next year and they have begun to talk definitely of marrying in June, 1962. There's nothing warm about Mary, We feel we know her no better than we did on her first visit, though she visits here often. We've given parties for her and had her to countless meals. She always writes formal had much fun. [DIFFICULT TO TAKE Ray is so sweet when he's home by himself but, when she is with him, they make fun of my children, my burnt biscuits, etc. Yet they come by our house nearly * every night she's in town. Her last visit was just un-| ge |bearable. I've tried so hard to like her but she makes it impossible. { I want so badly to tell Ray my . he knows I lationship. I hate to think of it |falling apart over the years be-| cause of her. I think he suspects how I feel| about Mary but he never has asked me if I like her. He says he loves her and wants to marry her. Should I keep silent? My mother says 1'd be a fool to say anything. My best friend urges me to|} |speak up since nobody else will {and points out it will be too late {after he marries you think? CP JEALOUS OF BRIDE-TO-BE | Dear C.P.: As I get the pic- |ture, you are meanly jealous of ary and are doing your ut. most to cut her throat with your lin-laws and others. | I think Mary comprehends the| {drift of your behavior and has her guard up, more or less, in dealing with you. You profess to be well - disposed toward her Psychiatric Help Is Indicated To Unravel Woman's Problem thanks but never acts as if she's| her. What do Meal in Itself | Thanks to the Earl of Sand- wich, a seventeenth century English nobleman, sandwich is {a household word. He liked| meat between slices of bread, [sometimes - sarcastic remarks and thus began the famous {are a kind of reflex response 10| sandwich as it is known today-- {your two-faced dislike of her.l; combination vf bread and fill-| = couldn't love my brother-in-law|i'm sure she is a different per-\i,o 1 no longer is necessary °" {son when she is with real friends|(," cs onl {whom you don't know and can't sandwiche {twist against her. | Your attachment to Ray is [too proprietary. Whether you {label 1t sisterly or sisterly-in-| {law, it is not appropriate. | You've considered yourself a great love in his life, 1 think, and have tried to upstage his fiancee with a parade of your |nearness-and-dearness to him. But, as Mary apparently isnt| impressed, you'd like to prove) the point by making trouble be-| tween them, if possible. Shame] on you! y slices of bread for s, however. | Here is a sandwich loaf idea) (from Macdonald Institute, Guelph. Split a loaf of French bread lengthwise. Spread the opened sides with softened butter and mayonnaise. On the bottom half {of the loaf place leaf lettuce and {then a thin layer of Spanish |onions. The next layer is sliced tomatoes. Cover these generous: ly with sliced Canadian cheddar cheese, Salami, and then ham, topped with lettuce, complete Take your cue from the pru-| the gigantic filling. Put about! dent example of the parents and, five toothpicks in the loaf to} don't interfere gratuitously in|hold it together and then cut| other lives. Get psychiatric help|into serving-size pieces. It tc free yourself of the jealous|should serve 5 to 6 people. heebie-jeebies. M.H. | Serve this knife-and-fork sand- Mary Haworth 'counsels|wich with pickle slices, potato through her column, not by mail|chips, and a tall glass of milk. or personal interview. Write her| Watermelon wedges are a good in care of this newspaper. {finale for this summer meal. be active and energetic, {may become too enthusiastic? over dubious projects. [too much emphasis on line, the i | furniture, while there is little THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA lL Ip I§ FOR TOMORROW ; Most persons will be receptive to new ideas now; this is the| time to put them over. The| P.M. promises to be exception: ally pleasant for social gather. ings, group activities of any FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday, : your horoscope indicates fine prospects for you. During the next 12 months occupational matters will be|d under especially good influences} and you should profit hand- somely through work which calls for endurance, Recognition for efforts along these lines is indicated during? October. During November, fi-|¥ nances will be under generally good aspects, so that you should) } find. many of the pressures ol the past lifting. Domestic relationships will be governed by generous vibrations for the balance of the year, ex- cept for a brief period in No- vember, Avoid strain and nerv- ous tension in October and look|? for a good business break in|} December. A child born on this day will but New Furniture Boasts Exotic Wood Finishes By ELEANOR ROSS In fashions, when there isn't news is likely to concern itself with fabric. So, in the newest change choice, wood. To achieve that "something new and different", designers| have turned to exotic woods and made superb use of their grain. Myrtle, Carpathian elm, acacia, zebrawood and thuja, are some of the new. woods you'll be hear- ing about as furniture salesmen extol their beauty. And beauti- ful they are, too. Joining these new woods is an old favorite, long in eclipse, rosewood. Once the big favorite for pianos, it is used now for handsome desks and dining ta- bles. Other pieces combine rose- wood with other woods, such as walnut. in line or in period there is news about slow cooking recommended for many As for styles, everything that steak such as T-bone (or porter- isn't strictly period is now la- house), sirloin, vr 7 is THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 22, | Ce Ra Mir of a. ang Mrs Horst Frank Thajer, all of Oshawa, ajer, Lowe avenue, is " fourteen-month old Stephen | a oo eandton o} Mr, John. Stephen is the grand- an rs. John Black, Czecho- son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar | slovakia. Morrison and Mr. and Mrs. --Aldsworth Photography Try Mushrooms, Green Pepper With a Juicy, Tender Steak Contrary to the low-pressure,(l strips 2 tablespoons butter 14 teaspoon salt 15 teaspoon pepper large green pepper, cut in cuts of meat, tender club or wing a p BEY Ch, Miss Sadie Hill, a resident of Hillsdale Manor, was awarded first prize in the first contest for. residents of such Homes in Canada held recently at the Canadian Na- ol = TIZEN W INS PRIZE in needlepoint with her exhi- bit of 'Madonna and Child". Mrs. William Baldwin, chair- man of the senior citizens' itt is seen making tional Exhibition. Miss Hill, the presentation of a ribbon beled "contemporary." And this require high heat and quick takes in a lot of territory from|cooking for best results. When Oriental to Scandinavian, |frying a steak, to keep the juice Mostly, the pieces are clean- lined and some are very inter- inside where it belongs, searing the meat on both sides for one | esting. Of the period designs, minute is a good practice to fol- Regency seems destined for allow, The frying pan needs to be new run. very hot and should be rubbed As for scaling, the changes, with a little of the fat trimmed here, too, are not too obvious.|from the steak. A one-inch steak Consoles and buffets have added will take about three minutes 1% teaspoon garlic powder (or 1 clove garlic, minced) Saute mushrooms and green pepper along with the season- ings in hot butter for 8 to 10 minutes, stirring frequently. Serves 4 If you're an outdoor cook, don't bother with a frying pan. Simply wrap the i to- CRISPY OATMEAL COOKIES B cup butter 3 cup shortening cup white sugar cup brown sugar egg several inches to their heightieach side to cook it rare, four together in foil, folding the edges and the tall, almost shoulder-ifive minutes each side for me-|over securely and cook until | high dresser-chest is back again dium, and about six minutes vegetables are tender. (Time |after quite a scaling-down. |each side to make it well done. (will vary, depending on your The cane-back armchair is| jf you prefer to broil your|fire, but allow 15 to 20 minutes and a cheque. Hill, who is 78 years old, won | --QOshawa Times Photo the class No. 125 petite point | Cream bufter and sugar. Add generally swing gently below|While inwardly hating her qual- eggs. Mix in four, salt, soda,|fitted tops, the flare starting|ities of individuality, her at- baking powder. Mix well. Add low. tractiveness to Ray and her as- oatmeal, coconut, walnuts and| Overcoals have the look of Seis of wealth and social posi- 1 1 1 1% cup flour 114 cup rolled oats 14 tsp. soda 1 tsp. baking powder 14 tsp. salt 34 cup coconut Drop on ungreased cookie sheets and bake at 350 deg. for|l 5 to 10 minutes. 2 Mrs. John Walter, balls and press down with fork. Bake 10-12 minutes at 300. Mrs. J. Dewell, Vincent Massey H and § Assoc. FRYING PAN COOKIES cup brown sugar (packed) eggs | 1%5 cups chopped dates South Courtice H and 8 Assoc.| !4 teaspoon vanilla COCONUT OATMEAL i Sure Rise Rrispies COOKIES : i h | coconut cup shortening : : ; cup brown sugar Put into a frying pan the| eggs brown sugar, beaten eggs and| cups quick oats dates. Cook over low heat for| cup flour 10-15 minutes. Remove from cups coconut heat and add vanilla and Rice tsp. soda Krispies. Add walnuts. Form tsp. baking powder into small balls, using wet tsp. salt hands, and roll in coconut. Let Cream together shortening, S¢!: sugar and eggs. Sift soda, flour Dan Parker, and baking powder. Add to _ Ladies Guild, | above. Add oats and coconut. St. Luke's Preshyterian Church. Drop from tsp. to greased CHOCOLATE cookie sheet. Bake 375 400: ran trre REFRIGERATOR COOKIES deg. for 10 minutes 4 thsps. butter Mrs. S. Worden, th : South Courtice H and § Assoc. sps. white sugar thsps milk COCONUT CRISPS thsps cocoa cup butter thsps dried milk powder cup granulated sugar Mix above ingredients until cup brown sugar well blended then add as much| | egg, beaten flaked cereal (corn flakes etc.) % cup shredded coconut as mixture will hold. Form into 133 cups flour balls and allow to set several 1'4 cups rolled oats hours in 'frig. 14 teaspoon soda : teaspoon baking powder Mm. weorge, Bimonison,| 4 teaspoon salt St. Luke's Presbyterian Church. | Cream butter, add sugar and egg and beat until fluffy. Com- NUT SMACK bine dry ingredients and add to Bottom: creamed mixture, coconut last. | 12 cup Form into . small balls, and| % cup place on buttered baking sheet 2 egg and press with fork. Bake for salt 810 minutes in a 375 degree|1%4 cups flour oven. Allow to cool slightly be-|1 tsp. baking powder fore removing from pan Yield Mix all together. Press -- 10 dozen cookies cake pan Mrs. Robert Sheffield, Top: . mw Gertrude Colpus H and § Assoc.|. ©58 Whites (beaten stiff) 1 cup brown sugar ORANGE CANDY COOKIES |! cup nuts cups cornflakes 1 tsp. vanilla | cups sifted all-purpose flour! Mix together, pour over bot- teaspoon baking powder [tom part. Bake at 350 until tsp. salt brown, about 25 minutes. one-third cup soft butter or Mrs. E. Skinulis, margarine Vincent Massey H and S Assoc. cups brown (firmly packed) UNBAKED MAPLE COOKIES 2 eggs Boil for 3 minutes: 13 pound Mrs. 4 2 2 6 1 butter sugar yolks into 2 1 Iv: 1% sugar { |ever; bulky with large collars. Glowing lightweight British tweeds, Scottish pebble weaves and bold checks, and deep-piled fabrics in raisin reds, fir greens, winter white, vivid turquoise and African violet are all seen, with black and more black for the little evening dresses. The general impression is one of youthful, charming designs, with an elegant uncomplicated freshness, with even Hartnell forsaking elaborate embroidery, and without a bizarre garment in sight. s 4945 37° SCHOOL-MATES By ANNE ADAMS Three to mix-match happily y school day. Pop-over top and skirt are sew-easy and so | gay in plaid or checks with sim- gum drops. Form into small controlled ease, are generally tion. As of now, it just isn't in you |to like Mary. Her appearance |as Ray's fiancee puts your nose out of joint. She is the new (about-to-be) Queen of the May and what most gets your goat--and pro- |vokes you to wage war on her-- {is that she has credentials for making a durable record, so- cially, that you can't top. You feel both has-been and second-string in comparison to Mary (a computation that ex- ists in your head, not hers, I wager). TOO PROPRIETARY In all probability her general reserve and her | lair of cool Best For Greens Food specialists at Macdonald Institute, Guelph, say the most important thing to remember in [cooking green vegetables is not to over-cook them. Over-cook- ing causes sogginess, loss of many vitamins, and poor color. Never use soda to keep vege- tables green when cooked, or they will become slimy and vit- amins will be destroyed. The vegetables should be cooked just until they are crisp-tender. Taste them to tell when they are done to suit you. Eight to ten minutes for garden peas and |ten to fifteen minutes for green beans is usually long enough. Start the prepared vegetables in a small amount of boiling water -- about half an inch in the pan. Many of the vitamins vegetables contain are water- soluble; therefore when you use less water, you lose fewer vita. mins Chlorophyll, the ingredient that makes grass green, also makes vegetables green. Green vegetables contain plant acids | | CHILD GUIDANCE here again, the cane combined the first time.) Safety Rules To Observe When Riding A Bicycle By G. CLEVELAND MYERS Most fatal accidents on bi- cycles result from collision with motor vehicles -- 480 in the United States in 1955; Non-fatal injuries numbered 30,000. Two- thirds of the deaths and injur- ies were among children five to 14 years of age. With 20,000,000 bicycles in use in 1955, it's encouraging that deaths and injuries were less than in 1941, when there were only half as many bicycles. Two out of five collisions oc-| curred at intersections, wto out] of three during daylight. Half of the bicyclists killed or injured were violating a traffic law. Half involved a violation by the motor vehicle driver. One out of five bicycles involved had some mechanical defect. Most common traffic viola- tions by cyclists are failing to yield right of way, cutting in and out of traffic, too great speed for conditions, disregard of control devices, riding against traffic, improper turn- ing. COMMUNITY RULES In addition to general traffic| rules, the child riding a bicycle should know and observe the rules in his community. Your child may be most ready to discuss these rules at quiet times in the family, when he is most receptive emotionally to consider them and you are most persuasive. Sometimes, when several playmates are present, each may vie with the rest on] naming a rule the others had| not thought of { Here are some important rules to observe: The bicycle rider should ride on the right-hand side of the street or highway, moving with the traffic, not facing it. | | that are released in steam when the vegetables are cooked. If these plant acids contact chloro- phyll during cooking, the chlor- ophyll turns a muddy-green color. So, to keep the vege- tables a bright green, leave the lid off for the first five minutes FALL IS FUN RATES LOWER at St. Jovite, Que. Use familiar hand signals. Never crowd ahead between cars at stop signals. It's well to walk the bicycle across heavily- traveled streets and all railroad grade crossings. Don't carry more passengers than the bicycle is designed for. Carry parcels only in a basket on the handlebars or behind the seat. Watch vehicles about to park. When not in use, the bicycle should be in upright position in a rack or the like. Never hold on to a moving vehicle. Ride single file except on paths set aside exclusively for bicycles. No stunt riding except in special places. EXERCISE CAUTION But knowing the rules may not guarantee their observance. As with all safety rules, the child needs to exercise caution and have acquired some inhibi- tions. When you see your child vio- (lating safety rules with his bi-|laway from him more often, | cycle, mere rebuke and warn-|leaving him at ing may be futile. In some in- | stances, he would profit from with handsome woods. Some steaks, be sure to preheat the chairs are so nicely scaled that broiler and leave the doof of the two of them would be perfect|oven open slightly during the in almost any decor as a change cooking. Have the broiler pan from the usual occasional chair.[cold when you put the steaks | 1In.the functional field, there|On it, and place it so that the are nice offerings of wood-toned steaks are three to four inches {metal pieces, many with the| from the heat. Cook the steaks |soft contours, flared legs and|about six minutes each side for general lightness associated|rare, eight minutes for medium and 10 minutes for well done. with good Danish furniture. ; one, In some lines, the furniture] For a perfect combination, has chrome legs that contrast/Serve your steak with mush smartly with the wood tones of| rooms cooked almost any way the chair backs, table tops and|: - - broiled, sauteed or perhaps arms. These pieces, designed|like this with green pepper and for the family room, are de-|a hint of garlic. signed with an eye to plenty of use and easy care. |Mushrooms with Green Peppers _ | % pound (1 pint) mushrooms, WIFE PRESERVER Make up a week's school lunch sandwiches in advance, storing them in the freezer. If you remove one in the morning, whole or cut in pieces it will be nicely thawed by noon. your depriving him of using the - bicycle for a definite period. For six cents each, Bicycles: Sheet No. 1, may be had from the National Safety Council, 425 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago 11, Illinois. { PARENTS' QUESTIONS Q. My son, four, doesn't want {to be left alone. When he plays {he wants me in the room with him, at least until he gets ab- {sorbed in playing. | A. When you have occasion to go to another room, go and take no notice of his objections. Get home with a member of the family at first, later with a baby-sitter. le' For Goodness Steak! s"come ~AND-GET-IT FLAVOUR NE ~~! < § FIXTURES CHIMES { PLAQUES AT THE GENOSHA DINING ROOM Open Till 9 P.M. FRIDAY Pre-Stocktaking Sat LAMPS 109% 10 509) wns aad $ y 4 POLE LAMPS LAMP SHADES | ROOM DIVIDERS | [ [ cups brown sugar (diced) 12 15 cup flaked coconut orange-slice candy |2 . | 4 cup milk chopped nuts BUDGET VACATION WEEKS oll inclusive from $62.00 for 6 complete days. First week ple, white cotton blouse. |after the water returns to the Printed Pattern 4945: Chil-/Poil, to allow the acids to dren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 e5cape. Then cook covered, to 2 cup butter or Remove from heat and add: Ey, <r 1 AB £) / /4 4 {1 ' 3 Grease baking sheets, Heat 3 cups fine rolled oats tsp. vanilla % tsp. maple extract cup fine coconut fA oven to 325 deg. Crush corn- flakes slightly. Sift 1% cups of|1 the flour with salt and baking powder. Blend butter and sugar. Add unbeaten eggs, one at a time, beating well after D A each. Stir in sifted dry ingred- - i hing hareh ients, the diced candy (mixed! First Baptist Chure with remaining 1. cup flour), BUTTERSCOT | coconut and crushed cornflakes.| 1; cup bog CRISPS Shape dough into balls about 13 cup brown sugar one inch in diameter. Place on packed greased baking sheets. Press ¥ tsp. baking powder {ed paper. firmly | for yourself, family. 35c. top, skirt 13% yards, 45-inch; blouse 7% yard 35-inch fabric. Send FIFTY CENTS (50c.) in coins (stamps cannot be accept- Drop by teaspoonfuls on wax-| ed) for this pattern. Please print {plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRES Mrs. M. E. Chesher, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to Anne adams, .{c-0 The Oshawa Times, Pattern Dept., Oshawa, Ontario. FALL'S 100 BEST FASHIONS (fitting lid and leave the vege- -- separaics, dresses, suits, en-| sembles, ail sizes, all in our new Pattern Catalog in color. Sew speed the cooking. begins September Sth. Last FILET MIGNON |of a few minutes, 4 week ends December 9th. $ SPECIAL AUTUMN FEATURE Learn to golf or ride weeks from $64.00 for 7 days 6 nights all inclusive. The exception to this way of cooking green vegetables is spin- ach. Wash the spinach and re- move the stems; cook the thin leaves with just the water that is left clinging to them after washing. Use a pot with a close- PORTERHOUSE T-BONE * SIRLOIN ofl water sports in season. GRAY ROCKSINN [ SEARED TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL TASTE FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 723-4641 tables on the heat only until the leaves collapse -- a matter {Unlimited Lighting CANADA'S LEADING CHAIN OF HOME LIGHTING SPECIALISTS @©59 EGLINTON SQ. Scarbors PL. 5-800 @NORTHTOWN SHOPPING CENTRE Willowdale BA, 5-6981 © CLOVERDALE MALL (Corners No, 5-27 Hy) BE. 3-6041 ®DIXIE PLAZA Port Credit CR. 8.7662 OTHE CENTRE Hamilton LL 5.9747 ®O0SHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE Oshawa RA, 3.0922 ~

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