1 W.v.vrf ssssss w . Fahrenheit) away from draughts Prince Rupert Daily News Wednesday, October 18, .1950 Watch fjfie Experts iorea hqmb vise" election3 lor North Korea rather than- conduct them. Previously Rhee had expresscl indignation over a. United Nations move to restrict his government to power below the 38th parallel. THREAT TO WEIGHTY Diabetes usually comes on between the . ages of 40 and CO among people who are tea fl-Pi-csidc-nt until dough , retains a finger print when lightly pressed (about one hour.) Turn dough onto board and divide in pieces which will half fill baking-pans. Allow to stand a few minutes before shaping which is done by kneading pieces slightly and shaping Into loaves or rolls. Place in greased pans and lightly -grease surface of dough. wmaisr A f' .nt un ac- f J " u- hnnrd the By KAY REX Canadian Press Stalf Writer MOTHER BAKING AGAIN 0) Home-baked bread may become a fashionable food again as mother tries to curb her jumping food budget. With bread ranging around the wl. I" ,d ad- oDser" Made for the style-minded man who wants topnotch comfort, Lsckle'a Dress Boots give you firm support where it's most needed. They keep their shape and are long-wearing. Buy them at your Leckie dealer. Sow Many Flowers Now To Bloom All Next Summer 16-cent mark she may find it A surprising variety of seeds should be placed where they will ( worth her while to bake the can be sown this fall to provide , not be disturbed, perhaps near occasional batch. She will find SMOK .. J)! flowers and vegetables for next the asparagus in a garden screen j her family fully appreciative of Cover and set in a warm place j to rise until dough reacts again I to the finger-print test (about one hour.) I Baking: Bake in a moderately j hot oven (375 degrees Fahren- heit) until the loaves or rolls, shrink from the sides of the pan and give ft hollow sound when tapped 1 (about "one hour fori bread, 25 to 30 minutes for rolls . I If a soft tender crust Is desired, j brush loaves with milk or fat as ! the' treat. or border. -.Here are a few suggestions either for housewives who have never before tried their hand at bread-making, or those whoss skill has become a little rusty for lack of use. spring's garden. They include hardy annual perennial flowers and" vegetables, 1 which are not injured by freezing weather. Seeds of many perennial flowers sown now will germinate earlier and will have a corresponding longer growing season next year. Then, too. the weath The hardiest winter onion is the red perennial, sometimes called the Egyptian. This is one of the onions which, instead uf bearing seeds, produces at the top of the seed stalk a bunch of onion sets. These sets should be obtained and planted this fall, a foot apart In the row. In rows two feet apart; though few fami- soon as taken from oven. Remove from pans immediately and place on racks or set crosswise ering of winter speeds up germination of irises, the gas plant, on top of pans. Do not cover while still warm. t roll his ! "es will need more than one row. Dictamnus fraxlnella Quantity Four loaves of approximately l2 pounds each. Turn dough over once or twice j This onion never produces a round bulb, but In the spring as soon as the ground thaws, it begins to grow stalks like green onions, part of which can be pulled up and used leaving a portion of each clump to maintain the bed. Sponge Method (overnight)-Ingredients: One cake dried yeast: one-quarter cup lukewarm water; four cups liquid (water, milk or potato water); three tablespoons sugar; two table-purpose flour (approximately); spoons salt; 12 cups sifted all-two tablespoons melted fat. Scald liquid, then cool to lukewarm. Crumble yeast cake and soak in the quarter cup lukewarm water for one-half hour. Add sugar .dissolved yeast and half the flour to the lukewarm liquid. Beat until- smooth. Use a bowl .sufficiently large' to allow tne sponge to rise. -. , Cover and leave sponge at HAPPY SEA-LIONS The zoo at London, England,' 52 tons ' -of uses herring and whiting annually mostly for sea-lions. ' . -:. and phloxes. ' , ; Delphiniums, columbines, gail-lardlas, foxgloves, Canterbury bells, reech-leavfd : bellflowers. coreopsis in fact any of the hardy perennials can be sown this fall. Primrose seed gives much higher percentage of germination If sown in the fall than in the following spring. Sow the seed in flats or a seedbed where It may grow along until the plants are sufficient size to transplant. Mulch the beds with some rnaterial that will not mat down solidly, sucbas oak i INDIA'S FIRST The- first !?letron m'crr'n,e in India will be set up at the National Laboratory in New Delhi. ', : Run-Off in B.C. Rivers Lighter Weather in September in British Columbia was marked by a below-normal run-off in most rf Tt-atPrsbM. The pin-"ff In the Fraser, Skeena, Columbia YXXXJjj QUALITY SHOES Try 'Dally Hews Classified. leaves, pine needles, or fresh -n K-nnt,nn riwri w listed roonf temperature (65-70 degrees Fahrenheit! overnight or until sponge is light and porous and more' than double in bulk. , Second mixing: Stir sponge, straw. In the spring the beds may Irom three fourths to nine be protected by frames covered tenths of the normal for that with window screen or lath to month-break the force of driving rains add salt and fat, melted but not f hot. Add enough of the remain- ', - ing nour to make a dough that pnd prevent the. ' liny seedings from being washed out. A seedbed surrounded by a does not cling to the bowl and is NEW BUS SERVICES GRINDSTONE. Magdalen Is- II f f ! easily handled t wooden curb is an excellent place ; I Kneading: Turn dough onto WW to sow fall annuals. A cold frame been established on the Mag-c'alen Islands. One runs between ' a floured board or cloth and I knead 10 minutes or until will do as well; and many sow feeds in tr- open garden, where i tr in nf 75 miles twice i sm00th and elastic and smal1 mi em bubbles show on the'surface i. crnnH ! daily, and the other began on ! Grindstone Island in late Sop- Sow thinly, mixing small seed , tember making a round trip of with dry sand to help scatter It, . 15 mUe? slx times daily . FIRST RISING ' , V . Form dough into a ball and place In a lightly-greased bowl, in the bowl so that the surface becomes slightly greased. This VIRGINIA CIGARETTES ana ao noi sow mucn aeepcr than you would In the spring. disease; tula, Many gardeners cover the row prevents a crust from forming sowing - ' ! acalns m wanaaa man uipn- , . I . , ' therla, measles, scarlet fever or :-Cover the bowl and let it stand which ui ...n usually Annuals are . in a ariTl place (80 to 86 degrees successful from fall sowing In- , ,,, .v , r IIHl'J I'JAY TO HAHE elude aiyssum, snapdragon, ca-1 calia, calendula, calliopsis. candy-1 I tuft, centaurla cyanus, clarkia, -osmos. e-cr3chilt''.ia. euohorbia, , j gypsophtla. larkspur, lupin, nico- j t tiana, petunia, , annual phlox, f.iASi::D potato mi rxrjTE i annual poppjes and sweet peas. ! Annua' vegetables which can be sown this fall include lettuce, : spinach, and New Zealand spln-! ach. Perennial veeetablcs such ' a? ' asparagus, rhubarb and hardy ' onions are better planted thl? fall than next spring. Asparagus , FPd rhubarb will be ready to harvest a full vear sooner while the 'onions will produce a harvest next spring. V V!-. . V - ". - - 0V ft If No washing! tlo peeling! Ho cooking! Ho mashing! For the asparagus b?d, roots 'iT'llld he nht'M'Y" !"d rl (. 'i a location which need not be disturbed during the life of the I 1 potuUi has thickened, to desired consiHlency; add butter and whip until light and flu fry. . ' That's all I'j cup makes 4 to 5 garden. Deep, rich soil Is required and the plants should be given three feet each way be ; A niU additional upply of this famous I'SV V 1M iV-J. v S tween hills. servings of delicious mashed potato,; , r.n.Ji.. R Whi.kv ha. reached the WTK TTrW V&77Vr JTXK Rhubarb Is another long-lived at only a few cents a serving. i iThiC,J-!rii' r plant. Six plants will suffice for There are many other uses for' maturt perfecuon for which Una brand has g i llTrnTll! IklH Actually in one minute, with practically no work at all, you can now serve your family mashed potato that "melts in your mouth"! Just get a remarkable now food product called French's Instant' Potato now at your grocer's. Then do this: Wait unlil your dinner U ready ' to M-rve. Then, bring aome Bulled water to a brisk boil, add milk and French's Instant Potato, according to simple directions on package. Stir fur a few seconds until the average Iamiiy ano uiey French's Instant Potato. Try it as a tolling for Shepherd's Pie; in whito saitee; as a thickener for gravy, stews, etc. You will find French's In ant. Potato in the canned vege-tahle se-(jon at your grocer's. Try this magic new product todayl : traditionally been noted ... a perfection 5 ps? sj.yjjj 3 recognized by the people of B.C. who ap- A CA 00 Z preciate the full-bodied flavour and mellow g . , Ti I richness of B.C. Double Distilled. O l'?.1 CT10N SALE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS fW4 BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERY iifpEi- KEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. , on your next J, October 19, at 2:30 P.M. Fl IhMT A y21 I! Tni aUvertisemcnt is not published or dUpla ru by the Liquor Control Board or by the J ' ILlVili - I ' Government of Jritish Columbia. CHARTER .044 8rh E. (Cock of Johnson's Grocery) ictcd by the owner I will sell by Public i: t: Auction the following articles: 1 Ostcrrield Suite 3 pieces. 1 l,0"V(,r Vacuum Cleaner. Tr,ntc Lamp, Silver Ware, Cedar Chest, larclii- nirrt"s. Dining Room Suite (oak) Ch CHAPTER FLIGHT PLANES available for -O Aerial Suryeys'l lf t O Aerial Photography? O Private Charter ; J - O Timber Cruising, etc. ALL.INTCRIOR AND COASTAL POINTS For RATES INFORMATION - UF.SEUVATIONS PHONE 476 QUEEN CHARLOTTE AIRLINES LTD. lna Cabinets, 9x9 Axniinster Rug. FALL SPECIALS NOW! GROCE R Y Phone Red 655 GROCERIES CONFECTIONERY FRUITS VEGETABLES I f:2? s 32XZB I Cow Bay Store save on ( CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION I MnnWh RanBr Oil Burner. 5 Dr"5scrs, singer Sewing Machine. -Dpsk' Enkcase. Sewing Table, Camp Ded. T!e Ul". Dishes, Tots and Puns. ' ' alne Machine, Copper 3ollcr. " TERMS CASH ' George J. Dawes Killas &' Christopher Bldg. Air Freight on all Flights AUCTIONEER