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The Brussels Post, 1937-8-11, Page 6Orange Pekoe I�) :lend I8 • SALADS i frozen, by Using 1 tilbl+,11c1. 1 es:eta- ' �t"`Al'-+' 1,,t, -r1 gaining :waked in 9 isle,' AND COOL DESSERTS salad,: and rh t;t tyi::rh 311 b: snuuldyrl it frozen in the re:' 1 . ,- ter and whi ', :'iv- .;umr.y:ll f:--. 1131 air to a simple ineel are nl::rly- 1r1I(' 131>1 to 'he lznit ••wif • • du, leg the het sttnimer mo't`es. it Is lett hard i0 pr,•l8"r such. .i+ -'1'-i' daring the ce 1 of ette4 musette:. and it is,:1 J' at. rel: to know that a t mp:lug salad +,r dessert is 3)t;; to eerve when tier: llt..r ,1 of 1trsr Hour arrives The Milk i -til aa•tton Service, De. 2111nion Dena -Amer[ of Ar: nrtlwn recommends the following: CHEESE SALAD 11,1 cups cream cheese or creamed cottage cheese 1 green pepper, chopped , 1 cup crushed pineaple, well drailied ?'a cup flute, chopped 74, cup mayonnaise lie cup cream. whipped Salt, pa.•prika, celery salt to Sefton cheese. with fork. 9qu green pepper, pinapple, nuts, yeti. naise, whipped cream and ings. =Pour into freezing- tray ctrl(; let stand foto hours. Slice an11 serve on crisp lettuce loaves. (1.e• nidi With watercress. Salad int:: be frozen by packing carefully x•': ]- ed mould In six parts of ice es et:' - part salt and allowing to stand foto to six hours. Salad may he moulded, instead of S a t D- A- RANN FURNITURE AND FUNERAL SERVICE D. A. RANN Licensed Funeral Director and Embalmer AMBULANCE SERVICE P. of f atr'r, 1)131 ( Aic! n ora !.e.!t. 331 el..ese. .1 ItLL!14D Pmts...: O ( SAseit 1 tabic poctt g'antil'lt,+,l .., lse �t•np void web r 114 cup co.,d .se d > sere, ...osp 1 cup el 1111 ,'•. 1. <?:' rhe s, 11( 141(3 lntyrtrral 2 • 1 ta.blr- 1 eon onion in,( -e• tu1> st...(11 1313 v, ' l•Ca Ur 33 cup ,.hcp3tal 3e teaspoon salt 11 en") crc>„m, whipped Soak gelatine in cold water thou' minute: Heat .,(1110 Orth 1 t,..t,a water. add cheese, oniolr juice 1 -^o t tr"11 by 1t: 1; onion. Heat oath c.' e^, is ` ..> nr'1, Add Autice1,I tine std 0!ir until dissolved, Chili, and when partla:ly set. acid imi'011• uahsc,, whipped rl't'am and alio•_, Or tra::y. Turn into mould that 1124 been riiesed in ('aid water ani chill. When fires, remove to bed of lettaes, and se,ce with mayor ea Ise. Sprinkle with paprika. This salad may by frozen by following dir•'ctio•h given fur (i t'+:e FIWIT RICE 1 tab1.';.; eon g:a>3)U11 ed gala"1(e 1; (•up cad water 1 (tp hot rooked rice r1( teaspoon salt • L 'old. noel-$ fruit sugar 1 teaspoon v::n:1113 1 MI) whipping cream 54. cup div:.d or crushed fruit ?;% cop blanched almonds Seek gelatine in cold water di - solve in hot rice. Arid salt, sugar and Vanilla. Coni and r -hip, weer, mixture begins to thicken, fold ill whipped cream, fruit and nuts. Piece apple, peaches, banaltas, strawber- ries, maraschino cherries or a coo binatien of fruits may be used. MOCHA MARLOW 211 marshmallows 1 cup hot 'offee • tr• cup toasted almonds BREAD IS NOT FATTENING New Reducing Diet allows 2 Slices of Bread at Every Meal FOLLOW THIS BREAD DIET PLAN 1660 CaloriPlan qday about reducing allowance of the average woman. • BREAKFAST 1 glass fruit juice Small serving meat, fish or eggs 2 SLICES TOAST, 1 sq. butter 1 cup coffee (clear) 1 tsp. sugar • LUNCH OR SUPPER Moderate serving meat, fish, or eggs Avera1 SLIGES BREAD, 1 sq. bue serving 1 green tter Average serving fruit salad 1 glass milk • DINNER H glass fruit or tomato juice' Generous serving meat, fish, or fowl A x preen serving 2 vegetables, Small serving simple dessert 2 SLICES BREAD, 1 se. butter 1 cup coffee or tea (clear) 1 tap. sugar /VIM new BREAD DIET is based on the proved fact that bread itself is not fatten- ing. Bread is an energy food. Extreme reducing diets cut down too much on energy foods because starch is con- sidered fattening. Bread is not just a "starchy" food. It is a combination of energy - giving carbohy- drates and a special form of protein that helps burn up fat while you are re- ducing. Extreme diets often break down vital tissues, and should never be taken with- out a doctor's advice. Go on. the Bread Diet— and be splendidly energetic, not weak and irritable. This diet gives you the main part of your energy food in bread. For Sae At Rowland's Bakery W. E. Willis, Palace IBak ry Brussels, Ont. THE OSSEO POST ssyhtgl "M'l011en, repeat these son. tangos 1n your own Ivarcls: I see a ▪ £OW: Tile caw is pretty, The cow can run," :lllcltey said: 'BOY, 1(1011 do' cow; ' Mn't she a honey! An' 1 est You kin she tal=e it on de lain?" (may be omitted) 1 cup wltippiu Oret1111. 1'inell of salt Flavouring Add mlareh11ta11aw6 10 hot calree and stir until dissolved, "Chili and low to ptu'tihly set, Whip erea,n and add marshmallow mixture, Add flavourhig. 1'h•eeze as "Chagas Salad." HOUSEHOLD HINTS A. Wile finely grated cheese added to thinsoap implores the 11)s1.a lm- tuon::ely, •• • • To wee/ wells out of the piano. rub the weed wcnit inside of rho case frequently with en peuthatr. '('4, melte an blexpenstvlik 31311 e f- 1.?etiye tootiecleaeser mix e(1ua' pazt� 3,t hon•.,14u14 sutr 1)33)1 baking - soda. • * • squeak stand 1i,1>31( an an 0PPP 11. u: ci_rh wide cn t,i• :Al ell arouse: t'1, soics, fir ell soaks in and. ', 1., .l,v 1:,.tt;.•sr, and. the squeak is seete. • • • All seasottinge should be added v'. ry gradually 30 soup, of the fievar [nay be too strung. • •• • 'When frying fish, use clarified (Well)es or salad oil. Lard smell, and butter fries a bad color. • * • To Lela rid the pause of the odor of • t .oking vegetables, put a little vinegar in an open saucepan on the stove. • * * Salt beef is Improved ie flavor if a few 01111(11 onions and a desert- 5poan1ul of brown sugar are added eh31e cooking. ♦ * • To keep a boiled fowl a good color, rub the fowl over with a piece at cot lemon and wrap i0 grease -proof paper for boiling. • • • Root vegetables, such as carrots, turnips, ate,, 51300131 be freed from all dirt and grit; those of the greed variety should be alloyed to soak for a few minutes in cold water to which a generous pinch of salt has been added. by Grant Fleming, M• D. oaot�=a A HEALTH SER\ICE OF THE CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES MEASLES Measles is a child -killer. This dis- ease which so many regard as of no seriousness and which is thought of as a necessary civ'), accompanied by certain inconveniences, is, as a metier of fact, a serious menace to child life, and because of the number of children it kills, it ranks - high amongst those diseases that take life in early childhood.. In one year there occurred In Can which 264 were children under one .ycltr of age. Most deaths from meas. l •; te.cur under five years of :41. The til t (attacks Lspecially Goae under three :,cars, This older 013- 0111,d, 111. lx.t.'-t chance he has tri 1 1 8322A -11--,::;1 a is eottanttnicabl'e di;,_. ., 11 i:- 1,::. a feat, tie, sick 1,, 113 3' -, r'•r'. ,asily spread and ,j1: 011 1;11,1 el _ sap ,:1. this !lis dh. a- 11131.,..;•; a 3)11(• b•••:-» 31''',ts/1 by i previous a.l.r.. It is :- Itlisi:i 3°:en 3dva (1(311 child mast have me::eles, 11 .; 1: ins ival to expose nhilri;111 to ins:1''1. because to do so is to risk their lives, Meusl,;'i is Serious not only ise. zonae i!. kids, boa lnteaus,, It s�•a:•3,,[t• to prepare the ground for ohne,• di- seases, It 3s Lite pneumonia t'o:luc:• ing measles which make, a dangerous. Tuberculosis Indy le- -come active after measles. Concerning the metro) of ul'','sles. Concerning the control of 11 it must he remembered that win 3 most contagious during ti;,< days barn:e the 111811 apps.1r8 Ian 1l1:; rha',nn. It is advised that ever:, with a cold in the bead he kepi away from other 1111)drrn, not only to lre- vent the spread of colds, but l e•sn31e, the cult] may be 11,, first ot.age, the most contagions stage of measles, Punt of the protectors of cilia life is 1113' irl'oteelion of lite child from measles, Questions ('nncern3ng Health, ad- dressed to the ('aandian Medical Ate sedation, 114 College Street, Toron- to, will be answered persontlliy by letter. Read the Ads. As Mickey Would Say It The teacher was tying to impress upon her young pupils in the tene. mens district the importance et be- ing original. She illustrated by Civic Holiday and How It CQme To Be Originate Do ' you know wily _111e first :Mildly In August is celebrflted 11 s1( ?uaitley Of course --because To'rnto and outer large cen'.(ts set aside that clay for recreatiolt. Since the idea o'igleated in 'Ter, onto and spread, not only tlu'ough- olat -Ontario but to other provinces of the Dominion us well it mit•:,[ be of interest to consider the ori31(1 It is sixty-eight years ago that the Toronto city council -thought it do, sizable that the citizens be given an opportunity, to enjoy another holi- day. ' So, at the council nmeeiing. of August 6th, 1569, the mayor 10.3:4 e. procladation requesting that such a day be observed. The first civic holiday eves on \\'e(nesclay, the 15th of August, 1569. Just as now there are people who maintain that there are too many holidays, so there were then, and the neve holiday met wi111 •opposition. Why, only two years before en ad- ditional t1-di ional holiday had been created shy setting aside July 1 as Dominion Day, There were people who +fo'e- saw in holidays the ruination of the country—idleness Yves actually be- ing encouraged. The previous gen- eration thrived without holidays from May 24th to Christmas. Toron- to of 1569 .had an extra day --why agitate for more? But the majority of the people 3411• served the new holiday with enthus- iasm, Picnic5 and excursions mark- ed the day, Of course there were no motor cars and apparently no ' baseball — lacrosse seems to have been the game The idea of an August holiday found favour 111 England. The fact that Toronto had found it advisable SNAPSE1OT Gua WHAT PRICE LENS? You don't need an expensive camera for a picture like this. T IIiE owning a high-powered de luxe automobile, there is pleas- ure in owning 11 de luxe camera with an ultra -tact lens, Whatever one's skill as a photographer, one points with pride to the f.2 or the 3.3.5 on the diaphragm scale and properly boasts of the camera's great cepa- *ditty and of the variety of picttues which itcan tike. No greaten but that these expen- sive cameras with lenses allowing a maximum aperture at 3,2, 3.3.6 or 1.4.5 bane range and versatility that greatly increase opportunities in picture -taking and are a Source of notch satisfaction. And there is no doubt that in the hands of an ad- vanced enthusiast seeking technical perfection they are a superior tool. But 1f you are unaille to boast of owning such a fine camera, don't get an inferiority complex. You can boast, and justifiably so, of the fine pictures you can got with the ordi- nary camera at 3,6.3, or even with a simple meniscus lens box camera with but one stop at around 3.11. 'You may regret that you aro not able to take action shots at night of a theateroperlormalrao or in a night club or stop a diving beauty in mid- air. But do not forgot that many are the prize-winning photographs that have been made with ordinary cam- eras, box cameras not excepted. You must concede that favorable light conditions are required for your picture -taking, but remember that favorable light conditions are not uncommon phenomena. And dull, cloudy days, the diminished light of early morning and later afternoon and sleep shade are not, in these days of fast film, by any moans unfavor- able light conditions for an 1,6.3 loos. Beautiful photographs are taken with no lens at all—with a pin -holo camera. Again the owner of a camera with an 1.2 lens more frequently uses apertures equivalent to those in ordinary cameras because, for most of his picture -Laking, he does not need the 1.2 apertura. As with a high-powered automobile, he has the speed when needed. Remember that very poor pictures can be taken with costly cameras and very line pictures with inexpen- sive camerae. If you know what your camera will do and how to use it, whatever the speed of the lens may be, you will always have plenty of good pictures to boast about. 118 10HN VAN GUILD11111,. w PNlt1SDAY. Tfi1!ST 11)13. 1`.137 A"ER EVERY MEAL and satisfactory influenced Si}' John Lubbocy to select the first Monday in August for 31 holiday when ,Petting his Bank Ho]idny Act 1111010 the 13ritislh House of Commune in His choice may have influenced tlle.'Toontn city council four yews later in fixing the date of the new 11111110101' '1101111>17, 1')) to 1871 it vvn:- prod:i'me(l for any d(,y vv'h cli settee, a maiority of the city council, but in that year it was definitely fixed for the first 1)1o11day in August, and so it lute since remained. What Interests Women Most? The three major forces which guide the lives of women, according to an analysis made by the girls at the Columbia School of Journeliem and reported by Alice Hughes, are: Women's primary interest is to get a man and it not to keep him, then to revlece him with some more desirable one. 'their secondary concern 10 tc keep themselves looking young, beautiful and charming, Third, they are interested in ba- bies and children, Anna Stoese Richardson does 1101 support the analysis of tate colleac' girls. This experience investigator, after many trips across the reentry, says that `women are now most con- cerned with, first, preservation and rejuvenation of their faces and bodies; second, with active pleasure such as dancing, sports, trips, wane, and home ententaln'ment; and thud, bridge, though with some Less fury than l3) the past; and fourth, she found modest absorption in cultural and civic affairs." Lf you are not already a subscrib- er to The Brussels Post, join the army of community builders who are. The cost is very small—less than three cents per week. Housewives to be Advised of Package Change Old Pavorite Product In Now Dress No 1.1113031 t gee days inst. what now fashion. : s likely to appear -- with evereililee ft'rrnr silk stool inge to au'•c:nwhiles coining out with neer y3aily I14(Hlels, such ellangee cease to be news, But when an uld 313131. :liar product lie Challenge Corn Starch announces .a package elutege —that's news to every housewife in. the district. In discussing the change, a Can- ada Starch Company representative stated that the now package on one side could contain many of the old characteristics of the familiar Chal- lenge parkuge including the Rooster trluie mark—and the new name of the product -Canada Cern Starch which it is planned to call bre pro- duct by in future. In ether words Challenge and 0>1115da Corn Starches are novo com- bined in this new package, Prev- iously they vvree sold separately. This simplifies the marketing and distribution and materially assists the grocers as they now merely stock the one package. There ho - ng positively no chane wghatever in the finality of the product it is believed '•m1 -lady" will be satis- fied, and soon call for it by the one name "Canada Corn Starch." Tom Mix and 113s femme horse "Tony" will be al the Canadian Na- tional Exhibition to delight the youngsters. The oldsters, too, will be entertained by the hero 0' the movies, who ]las quit the silver screen 3o• the circus, and will bring his own three-ring 8110w and "Wild West" to Toronto ter the ".Ex." A Dominion proclamation sets a- part Monday, October llth, as Thanksgiving Day "for the bountiful crop and other blessings." 1 El Ian'/qI ll pSENO mafI A ? ` 21, g 5' SA* :vel mauls pp 112,1, i,Nt 3101345 rar�ene cRO EA re ember, MIN Quantal Mut E r'uTELT YID,:+.r ®;e! It pays to use a quality paint—and quality is guaranteed in writing when you buy Martin-Senour 100% Pure Paint. No useless adulterants are used in the prepara- tion of this sterling product. The pure white lead and zinc oxide base gives you protection that lasts, cover- age that saves you money—beauty that does not fade. MULTI -USE ENAMEL Smooth flowing -quick drying -high gloss enamel. Good for inside and outside. 26 glorious colors, plus the revolutionary "Crystal Clear" finish. IT PAYS TO USE MARTIN-SENOUR I00% PURE PAINT VARNISHES & ENAMELS