Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jul 1962, p. 8

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ans oem ee oentetnrec rong g THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, July 17, 1962 Tomato Treats Have Eye Appea] Looking for an easy-to-make and colorful individual dish? Here's one from the Foods Department at Macdonald In- stitute, Guelph. Section to with- in % inch from the base, med- ium sized tomatoes, to make wedges that open up, yet are fastened at the bottom. Fill with a scoop of Ontario's deli- cious cottage cheese, just moistened with mayonnaise. Sprinkle with chopped parsley or chives and there you are! Sitting there on its bed of crisp lettice, it looks almost too good to eat -- but don't let that stop you. And_ while we are on the topic of tomatoes, try this for a new and different treat. All you netd is some leftover ham, six med- ium tomatoes, celery and onion. Hollow out the tomatoes, re- serving one-quarter cup of the pulp (use the rest for cream soups, for Swiss steaks, or Spanish sauce). Push two cups of chopped ham, % cup celery and % cup onion alternately through the meat grinder. Add % teaspoon pepper and % teaspoon salt during the grinding. Stir in to- mato pulp and mix well. Then TO RESIDE IN OTTAWA Following their Bermuda honeymoon, Mr. and Mrs. John Lewis Robertson will make their home in Ottawa. The couple was married re- cently in King Street United Ohurch. The bride, the for- mer Ellen Louise Scott, daughter of Mrs. Anthony Scott of Oshawa and the late 4888. sizes 124-244 Mr. Scott, was escorted down the aisle by her grandfather, Mr. William A. Branton, Osh- awa. The bridegroom's par- ents are Dr. James H. G. Robertson and Dr. Olive Rob- ertson of Salisbury, Southern | Rhodesia, who came to Can- ada for the wedding. --Aldsworth Photography KEEP IN TRIM stuff the tomato shells and top |with buttered bread crumbs. |Place in an open casserole and |bake at 350 deg. F. for 30 min- utes. This makes an excellent main dish for a luncheon gr supper. Remember too, that toma- toes, when eaten raw, are con-| |sidered to be an excellent! |source of Vitamin C. LONG POPULAR The term barbecue, cooking over hot embers, was known in', \Virginia before 1700. On Slice Uf. luact; ) TOGETHER THEY SIGN Pictured after their mar- | Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Neal of pw Pd bahintagevsgg epic | Oshawa and the bridegroom Yhurch recently are Mr. and | .. : 3 Mis. Robert James Talbot. | is the son of Mrs. Arthur The bride is the former Carol | Keating of Cobourg. Beverley Neal, daughter of --Photo by Garnet Belfry Iai Bailie, '| Rose Beas Respond) To a Clean-Up pat, skim milk, 1 glass, Lunch--Calories 370 Grilled cheese sandwich; CHILD GUIDANCE By G. CLEVELAND MYERS, late teens I had not seen or heard the words soil conserva- tion. But I learned during those early years a good deal about saving the soil. fields. Through them ran a brook and near by them some larger streams. After heavy rains this brook and _ these streams suddenly swelled with thickly muddied water and they often overran their banks, sometimes doing great damage with their floods. SOME MUDDIER IT soon learned that some streams were more muddy than others after a heavy rain, and noticed that those. which drained plowed fields were more muddy than those which drained grassy fields or land covered with trees or bushes. Indeed, some small branches of streams running into larger ones were clear and not muddy. After a lashing rain there often were many deep gutters on the sloping parts of the fields which had been plowed lately, or had no grass, bushes, trees or plants. Early I learned that ino gutters were made by rains} in the sod - covered fields; that when any sloping field was} plowed up two or more years) in succession it had more and} more gutters and deeper ones. 'HELPED FATHER i Sometimes I helped my father |not plowing land, of cutting for-| mediately, advise home econ- put straw or hay or branches, even stones, in these gutters so might even see with your child Guelph. as to check their growing | deeper or to hold the soil back} on which grass and other plants'lect a vast deal of information |offective control conservation on a/noisoning, GQUUBERY KArhint MONTREAL (CP) -- Jehane How A Child Can Learn About Soil Conservation might grow. When we put When I left the farm in my|branches of bushes or trees into these gutters, I learned to put them with the top forward so they would best catch he soil and hold i. When I was big enough to Our farm had some hilly per. my father showed me ow to turn the plowshare out on coming to a gutter so the grass growing in it, or on its banks, might stay there, some- times growing so well that some of these gutters disap- peared. I learned as a lad the alphabet of soil conservation, and not out of books. Many children of our nation also might learn from everyday experience this useful informa- tion, especially if they live in or near areas where the ground is not wholly flat. Some children living in large cities may not learn this so easily, though they niay see evidence of erosion from water in a back yard, in a park or in outlying areas. Consider how many children in suburbs might learn to check erosion in a gar- den, drive or lawn where one or more tiny gullies have started. ON MOTOR TRIPS Wherever you live, if you mo- tor with your children this sum- mer, you may easily call to their attention all sorts of ero- sion by water and the many ways of checking the erosion; the significance of plowing or ests or planting trees. You some flood control projects. Any city child may thus col- about soil motor trip with his family. MRACKHENS Leary Oshawa Girl Guide Chosen to Attend Camp at Iceland { Keitha Mosier, a member of 'the 2nd Guide Company, Ade- laide District Girl Guides, Osh- awa, has been chosen to repre- sent the Central Area Girl Guides at a Jubilee Camp in Iceland, July 28, August 7. Keitha is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mosier, 292 King street west. There will be 14 Guides and yn Leaders representing Can. ada. The camp will be held on the historic site at Thingveller with Scouts and Guides participat- ing from all over Iceland. Sev- eral tours have been arranged for the guides who will stay in KEITHA MOSIER Rejkjavik for one week after|land by plane, July 26. They the camp. They will visit the|will leave Iceland August 16, famous volcano Hekla, the gey-/by plane for New York and sers and the Glacier Mountain|then home. HOWARD'S Thoresjokull. The Canadian Guides will jmeet in Toronto and fly to New York July 20 where they will spend sxi days visiting places as Girl Scout Headquar- ters, U.N. Building, Planetar- ium, Central Park Zoo, Rocke- feller Centre and other. places) of interest. They will also cruise around Manhattan Island. The Guides and their Leaders will leave New York for Ice- SCENIC WONDER One of the four cascades of th Gersoppa Falls near Bom- jbay, India, is 820 feet high. | made eteigerate' ail Gees im-} SLIPCOVERS Slipcovers will be cut and pinfitted in your home. : 926 SIMCOE ST. N. 725-3144 omists at Macdonald Institute, Placing the food in shallow pans at temperature below 45 degrees F. is the most against food jbread, 1 slice, cheese, 1 slice} now ; ; loa : 5 j (1 07.); relish (melt under|yoy nore avsernmer cleareup,2enelt of Montreal will SOY acuity pends, Tal, tet (broiler); sliced tomato, glass Of|,qyice horticulturists with|°™ with her career as cooking)jixe manner, gain a rich abun-| Nine Year Old Wins ... at Karn's bd RIGHT FOR YOU! By ANNE ADAMS Softer shirtwaist -- pretty to look at, practical to live in! Good-taste details include rag- lan sleeves, crisp pleats. For cotton, blends. Printed Pattern 4888: Half Sizes 1214, 1414, 1614, 1814, 20%, 224, 2414. Size 16% requires 4 yards 45-inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins (no stamps, please) for this pattern. Ontario residents add 2c. sales tax: Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, ,STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, c-o The Oshawa Times Pattern Dept., Oshawa, Ontario. SPECIAL Summer Pattern Catalog. More than 100 styles -- sun, sport, day, dance, work, travel. All sizes! Send 35c. Calorie Count - By IDA JEAN KAIN Once upon a time there was an nine-year-old who tipped the scales at 100 pounds plus. How much plus she asked her mother to keep a secret, for it amounted to an _ oversize Thanksgiving turkey. A half-year later, this same young lady is 27 pounds lighter and proud to tell her weight. DownGame | {the calorie game I don't believe we could have succeeded. Kay jtakes the responsibility, looking jup the amounts herself. The iscore has been around 1,200 a| day. She keeps the score on all lcalories. By late afternoon she} begins adding up to see if she} can have dessert or some treat she might want. Prior to the calorie countdown game, all re-| She has changed from an in-|ducing efforts had ended in un-' active fatty, who didn't want to go near the playground, into a) About the meals: "We did not |1,270. : lovely young miss who leads ithe others in active games. ; y This is a heartwarming suc-jher are skim milk, low calorie her|ice cream, low calorie topping. cess story, so we'll let mother tell it. . . . She wrote in the hopes of helping other overweight youngsters to re- duce, "T thought you would like to know how our daughter just turned nine, is managing to lose weight. At 118% pounds, Kay was hungry all the time, Our doctor prescribed an appetite curber to be used only at the start. We bought her a com- plete calorie chart and Kay be- gan her own game of calorie countdown,"' The "game way' to reduce |proved to be the challenge|orie bargains. In this process 'needed. It was Kay's own de-|She changed her food habits cision whether or not she was): - entitled to a treat. Calorie arith- metic took the guess work, the nagging and the boredom out of the slim-down program. Her mother said: "Without 13 July, 1962 wherein a N. Johnston's want to le ston's Suit Sale right at July. Will any person or persons who witnessed the ac- cident on the Four Corners of Oshawa on Friday completely out of his trousers please contact JOHNSTON'S (OSHAWA) LTD. at 8 Simcoe St. so that they can tell him about their HALF YEARLY SUIT SALE that starts,on Thursday, 19 July. This fellow needs to step up to JOHNSTON'S QUALITY SUITS and avoid such accidents. Remember John- pleasant words and failure." buy a lot of dieting extras. The \few things we buy especially for |The rest of her diet is smaller iservings of the foods on our {menu, It is surprising how de- jlicious a bowl of fruit with its |moderate calorie score looks to jher and she now chooses fruit in |preference to candy or cake," jher mother reported. | Calorie. counting may be a chore to bored grownups, but to jan imaginative youngster it can /be an adventure that helps her |to get what she wants. This young lady learned which foods are too fattening for her calorie budget and which are the cal- . and became a winner! Tomorrow, Kay's before and after weight and waistline. Food Pattern to Outgrow Fat Breakfast--Calories 315 Cantaloupe, half, poached egg gentleman ripped the seat arn this poor man's name the Four Corners on 19 L. H. Hewson, 642 Mary St., Oshawa--vwinner of a brand new car Paul Minicola, CHERNEY BROS, LTD., presents the key to a Brand New 62 VOLVO to Mr, L. H. Hewson, Oshawa. The draw for the bright red Swed- ish beauty took place Sat., June 30 at Cherney's Peterborough store. Alder- man Gordon Monkman drew the winning ticket. skim milk; fruit choice: plums or 1 ripe peach. Mid - afternoon snack: ories 55 Orange juice, 4 oz.-fill glass with soda water. | 4 weeds out and break up an Dinner--Calories 530 | " 4 Swordfish, baked-liberal serv-|the soil surface. ing with lemon butter, 1 tsp.| Now that the bed is cleaned riculture. Cal- Stari by removing all the old tadle choice: Squash, wax beans F or carrots, new potato, 1 glass|Y°Ur Poses are cong yen the of skim milk, wedge of melon.|!eaves dark green and the No junk calories! {Plants have a general healthy Total calories for the day--|appearance, application of ni- trogen may do more harm than not too likely. pleasure, so few repair bills. the Mercedes-Benz 220S. 488 KING STREET WEST i No price change on most Mercedes-Benz models. NAGY MOTOR SALES while on a nine-month visit to Negaune: children and flower heads and-fallen leaves.|France. Mrs. Benoit will do sev-ltimited informistion on this sub- If the bed is weedy, hoe thejeral shows for the CBC while!ject in most schoolbooks. abroad, and at the same time |Canadians eat." lleaves but few blooms. ' If your plants need fertilizer,| ammonia and % pound of mur-| iate of potash per 100 square) feet not later than mid-July. L2- 2\the Ontario Department of Ag-consultant and also with her|dance of wisdom on soil conser- | work on a French cookbook|vation which they could make) interesting to their thus enrich the usefully hard crust that has formed on|show French housewives "how| PARENTS' QUESTIONS Q. | -|daughter, 9, would like to ved MOVIE CAMERAS juice: v | a jit this s : butter, plus lemon juice; vege-|un, what about fertilizer? If|good, You'll end up with lots of her? summer We have a typewriter. Our Should I let A. Yes, indeed. Show her how to operate it with care. write letters on it for hours, gaining in reading and spelling as she does. Will this be possible with your present car? Perhaps, but it's But it is done frequently with the Mercedes-Benz 220 Series, and right here in Canada, too. The 2208S is built to take it . . . to smile at the miles and the years. You've never known such driving Decide today in favour of long-term driving satisfaction: drive 728-5175 MERCEDES-BENZ She apply % pound of sulphate of}may choose to copy stories or AUTOMATIC 200M ~ Era, WA i. Holiday Specials AUTOMATIC ZOOM f 1.8 lens--Motor Zoom with pistol grip. List Price 199.75 169.5 KARN'S SPECIAL HOLIDAY PRICE .. £ 2.3 lens with pistol grip List Price $140.30 109.95 New CROWN REFLEX ZOOM £1,8 lens with pistol grip. List Price 156.40 109-95 KARN'S HOLIDAY SPECIAL PRICE... KARN'S HOLIDAY SPECIAL PRICE... 28 KING ST. EAST 723-4621 Open Every Evening 'Til 9 p.m. FREE DELIVERY

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