HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1938-5-18, Page 7Bargain Fares --May 19-- from Brussels
Tickets also sold from all 0411ace t O,N,R. Stations)
To CA N. R, Stations in the Maritime Provinces
Province of Quebec, New Breesavielc, ]Three Edward Island,
Nova Scoe is
MAY 20 & 21 to OTTOWA, $8.90, MONTREAL $10,25;
QUEBEC CITY, $14.25; STE. ANNE DE BEAUPRE, $14.86
ROUND TRIP FARES
lufermation from Agents, Fare, Tickets Transit Limits! and
ASK FOR HANDBILL, T130A
CANADIAN NATIONAL
TESTED RECIPES
ATTRACTIGE DINNER DISHES
Listowel at Brussels Jana 7
MIIdimiay at Atwoo) June 9
Ethel at Listowel June 10
Atwood at Ethel June 13
June 14
June 17
June 17
June 21
Brussels art Listowel June 24
Attwood at. Mildmay .,.....,June 24
Mildmey at Brussels June 29
Listont'ei at Ethel June 30
; F'ootbull fans will be interested
to note that several new teams
have entered this year according to
he above schedule, This, should
Prove a fast group and the support
of the local fans is requested, when
the local team takes on Atwood on
May 20th. Got behind your team
and be a booster, not a knocker,
Bruseels at Mildmay
Ethel at Brussels
Of course the flavor of a food is Mildmay ak Listowel
ea prime importance. Health'fuiness', Ethel at Atwood
of late years, is strongly featured,.
Bat don',t forget attractiveness.
Food 'that looks good, always
seems' to taste good, and the w11,2
housewife caters to the eye when
preparing her meals.
Fortunately, tasty, healthful dish.
es may be made attractive as easily
as any dish, Note the fol 'wing
realties as examples that prove the
truth of this statement:
Lima Croquettes
2 cup& cooked., dried Limas
is_, cup cream
Mteaseoon salt
3 teaspoon poult'rys seasoning
1 tablespoon tomato catsup
teaspoon pepper
% teaspoon powdered sage
1 egg, slightly beaten
1 cup due dry bread crumbs
Rub Limas through a coarse
straner. Add orumbs, cream, salt,
pepper, sage, and egg. Shape in
the form of small cylinders. Roll
In ceumba dip in 1 egg beaten with
2 tablespoons cold water and eeain
roll in crttm.bs. Fry in deep hot
fat (390 degrees F.) until brown,
then drain on soft paper. Place on
serving plate and garnish with rings
of friend' apple,
Baked Limas With Marshmallows
3 cups cooked dried Limas
y.; teaspoon salt
Ick. tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons brow sugar
a cup hot water
3 strips bacon
3 to 6 marshmallows
Put Limas in a buttered casserole
dish, adding water and stirring le
salt, butter and brown sugar, Bake
in moderate oven (350 degrees 5'.)
for about 20 minutes (until tbo'-
oughly heated). Then place bacon
strips over top, do with mar'hmai.
lows and place under broiler flame
until toasted to a golden brown,
Savory Baked Fish
Put a oneepound steak fish (hali-
but or cod) in a shallow baking
dish. Season with salt, pepper and
butter. Drain the juice off cauue'
tomatoes and use one crop of tate
pulp. Add one even teaspoon or
sugar to the tomatoes and pour
over the fish; slice a small gonion
over that. Bake twenty minutes
Pour on one-half cup milk or
cream; cover with bread crumbs
dotted withbits of butter, and bake
ten eninutes longer, Serve in Loi,.
ing dish.
FLAVOR USES OF PEEL
Grated orange and lemon rh1(1 ore
used by the best Cooks to flavor
cakes, pies, breads, desserts, frost-
ings, fillings, and; sauces, being p:'e
ferret for flavor and economy to
commercially prepared extracts'.
'In grating, only the yellowish 'por-
tion of the rind should 'bo removed.
The yellow portion containe the 011.
cells from which come the oils
that give flavor.
Winter oranges and lemons have
clean skins of waxy texture, espec-
ially suited, for grated rind and
gnound peel.
Grated Poets: Grate only the yel-
low portion, Use ,fresh or obit w:th
sugar and keep in a tightly goverea
Jar.
Ground Peel. The whole peel may
he ground fine and used 1(128 grated
rind.
Football Schedule •
Brussels at Atwood May 20
Brussels at Ethel May 28
Listowcll tut Mildmay \fay 25
Attwood at Brussels' May 27
Listowel o,t Atwood May 30
Mildi nay at Etholp May 31
Atwood at Llotowol ,Tune 3
Ethel at Mildmay ,, lune 4
CURIOSITY SPEEDILY
WANES
A year ago, with newspapers full
of the romance of ex -King Edward
and his American girl friend, a
group of business' men bought the
house at 212 East Biddle Street
where Wallis Warfleld spent her
girlhood. The house wa.s macre
over into a museum and {t.. fee of
one dollar was charged 'the curious
to go through it. Business soon
fell off and the admission price was
lowered to 40 cents. Thee the
Brice dropped to 25cents•. Last
week the house was closed and a
"For Rent" sign appeared on it.
CHILD MARRIAGES
BOOM 1N ENGLAND
A boom in child marriage is Eng-
land ,during 1036 is recorded in the
latest statistics of the registrar -
general in •London. These show
that 32 boys and 1,179 ghris of 16—
the lowest legal age for marriage
in England—were married in that
year, as comixtred with 19 boys and
31: girls in the previous year. In
eleven cases both bride and br,(le-
gro(um were only 16, but in other
cases the girls married husband.'
whose ages .ranged up to 55, None
of the 16 -year-old boys however,
married a woman over the age of
22, Statistics also show 'that
more boys than girls were barn in
the year under survey, the propor-
tion being 1,054 to 1,000,
WORRIED
(By A. R, K,)
¶ Wee Angus puzzles now and
then, when be looks on the world of
men, he don't know what to do;
when he grows up to be a man, he
wants to do the best he can, ticben
schooling clays are through.
ij And be likes staying on a farm,
knows everything about the barn,
with farming he's no fault, tut
iTnole Jed says if ho farms, and las
to fix his sheds and barns, he'll
clever earn his salt.
11 The man dawn at the barber
shop, says! that he works an awful
lot, Wee Altos talky! with hint tine
barber's al mys poor lie said, end
be can't save and get ahead, his
purse Is always slier.
¶ The stmt: who iron the ranter
store, he operates ' the place no
more, nor is be working yet, Wee
Angus heard him tell 0115 clay, h iw
folk got goods and wouldn't
and he is sulk in debt,
it The Mau Mur drives tate ?,,,..k -
01"s rig, told Anguo' that his pity's
not big, and he works quite a. tut,
the man where he buys all his
shoes, hes nearly always' got th'
blues-, nays trade is not so hot
tj So Angus wants le 1100\w, jest
how he'll ever make it go, he'd like
to have a plan; I tell him just to
learn a lot, end keep on liven' like
be ought ---tend do the best he can
ADVERTISING RATES
Carel of Thanks .... 25e
Engagement, Notices .,..,,,..,: ,,.,., 60c
Birth a11d Death Notices FREE
In 1lleanoeium 36c
Classified Adv:a, 25c Cash
(Over the Phone 35e)
THE BRUSSELS POST
EAST HURON DISTRICT
EXECUTIVE MEETING
The,annual meeting of the Exeeu-
tive and Board of Direotors of the
Bast Huron District of the 'CFo-
mOn's Ius'titute was held: on ;lion
day afternoon, May 2nd, in ,Fortt-
wteb, The president, tiles, J.
Harold Spier of Brussels, 'Presided.
Representatives were present from
Brussels, Ethel Bluevale, Gerrie
Ford's ich and Rutnatn Girls.
The chief item of .business area ar-
ranging the program for the Dir,tt'ict
Annual meeting to he held iu
Wroxeter on June 14th, The
session will open at 10 o'clock 111
the forenoon, when reports will lie
heard from the convenors of Stand-
ing Camanitteee. Items' of business
will be discussed and election of
of2eers take place. In the after-
noon= the following speakers will be
heard:—Mrs. L. G. Crozier, walker -
ton, Provincial Director; Miss Flora
Duriiin, County Coach for Junior
Girls' pr'ajecte, and Mrs. derelict
Hayes, Georgetown, from th.e that
totes Department,
At the close of tate meeting de-
licious' refreshments were served by
members. of the Rutnam Girls
branch.
Gandhi Says His
Days Are Ending
Bombay
M, K, Gandhi has predicted his
early death.
"My days are numbered," the 69 -
year -old nationalist leader wrote in
the newspaper Hsrijan.
"For the Hist time in 50 years I
find myself in the slough of des-
pondency. All about me is dark
ness; I am praying for lights . ,I
Have detected to me a flaw which
1s unworthy of a votary of youth."
Provision Has Been Made
For Fighting Polio
Caught unawares last summer,
Ontario health forces will be well
equipped this year to meet a res.
sible recurrence of the policmycn'y
epidemic which swept the province
during the summer of 1937,, Esti-
mates for the preventible diseases
branch of the Department Jr
Health contain $40,000 for fighcihtg
such an epidemic.
The financial provision was re-
vealed in the Ontario 'Legislature
when Dr, Ilarold Welsh, Conserca.
five, East Hastings, asked the Hon,
Harold J. Kirby, Minister of Heath,
why he esi imates for the branch
were $25,000 higher than last year.
"we hope we won't have to spend
a omit of t," said Mr. Kirby. He
explained that the experience of
the Department showed that a polio
epidemic might be comperatierly
severe in its second year. That
was the experience in the 1929-30
epidemic, lie said, so ample previs
ion is being made to sheet the si'un
tion this year should it arise.
REVISED BRIDGE RULES
1. Pick up Your cards as' dealt
so you 01111 be ready to hitt ahead of
the other ladies,
1, :h
2. When your hand is poor, men-
tion it, ars it will guide partner in
bid and play.
# d *
3, If partner bids first, do not.
hesitate. Blake a jump rause. He
has to play
,1' '8 '1
4. !Occasionally atilt 'what l;
tramp, as it shows you arra ineerest-
ed in the game,
5. Waltz around the table who',
dummy and look 411 other hands --it
helps.
* 9,
6, Never hurry. Try several
curds of cath (1'(111 1111411 su10 which
one you profcr,
7, !Help partner with sung:+at I0h1
Don't! show a lack of interest when
dummy,
:h a: ,r
8, Pool free to criticize j 37j1.
IntUtiher 111(11 not0 the inipro;'eaudli.
in Ids playing,
9. at eau`ds rent poor, expove al,
honor and demand a square deal 111
W/11/1.1 lug/ ou,
Y, >k 'k
10, if a money game, the en,'-' le
stop whole ahead. It leaves a Met-
ing Impression.
11, Always* explain your play,
pariicul•atrly 11185 set, 1t shecc'
card knowledge,
* >r W
12. 110 not try to lni'flm'isr• ail
the Pale*; 1t is t00 confusing,
WEDNESDAY, MAY 13th, 193
,136
quart
pint- .60
1/2 pint- .35
1/4 pint
ULTI-USE ENAMEL
Gives sparkling beauty and long
wear'ng protection to wood and metal surfaces
Multi -Use Enamel is the ideal finish to give renewed life and
beauty to shabby, lusterless furniture, woodwork, toys, boats,
garden equipment, etc. And it is so easy to apply ... anyone
can use it with perfect results. It flows on smoothly, leaves no
brush marks, and dries to a hard finish in four hours.
Start right now to brighten up your home with Multi -Use
Enamel. Being made of the highest quality materials it gives
a hard, tough surface that will retain its beauty under the
hardest usage. 26 glorious colors to choose from.
F. R. SMITH
Phone 62
Brussels, Ont.
EALTI
by Grant Fleming, M• D.
A HEALTH-1SER\ICE OF
THE CANADIAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION AND LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANIES
ANAEMIA
Twelve years ago, liver could be
bought far a fele cents, and was
used to feed the eat or the deg. Te -
clay, 80 sonny people are eating it 'et!
that the price bus advanced until it
is only the indulged cat which gets
an occasional taste.
It is no longer dam 1936 when
it was observed that patients suf-
fering from pernicious anaemia
were much im,r:roved when they
used a half -pound of liver each day.
Anaemia is a general term which
means that the blood is deficient in
guan'tity or quality, Tjtere aro sev-
eral kinds, of anaemia, such as that
which, follows upon a haemorrhage,
or the anaemia which develops 94 0
part of such chronic diseases as
tuberculosis, cancer, malaria and
lead poisoning.
Theo there are the anaeml:,s
which occur because of the failure
of the organs which mannf:5Clure
red blond cells. Weeanhasa live
out oxygen, and if there are net
enough red blood cells or if there Is
a lac.k of the haemorrhage which
should be in these cells to carry
oxygen, then the body tissues are
starved of the oxygen which they
need
The red cells are manudactered
by the red marrow at the ends of
the long bones. ribs' and vertebrae.
Pernicious anaemia was, until re-
cent times, almost always fatal, The
red cells• wer0 so rapidly destroyed
that the bone marrow could not
meet the demand; this, in the end,
meant death as the blood could not
carry enough oxygen to all the
tissues to maintain life.
Liver contains something welch
brings back the blood of pernicious
anaema patients to normal and so
gives them back their health, No
longer is the victim of per'nielhns
anaemia doomed to die; health and
strength are his through the 0ontnh-
ued proper use of liver or liver ex-
tract.
The fame of liver spread, and
many people began to eat it on the
general principal that what is good
for one ailment is good for others,
which is of course, absurd.
Liver is not even of value in the
treatment of ail anaemias. ahe
chlorosis, or "green sickness" of
young girls a form of anaemia, dis-
appears with improved habit's of 11v -
lug; other forms of anaemia re-
sttund to iron thereby. In all ^.'tees
a blood examination is required to
determine what form of anaemia 1,
present; this must be known bef'ire
proper treatment can be prescrihad,
HOW TO TREAT A MAN
by A Horse
When a roan drops from sheer ex
haust+ion or illness, prosniptly anise
an end -board or a cartstake and
pound him on the head and on the
ribs. If this does not fully recur.
erate him, kick him violently in the
stomach. This treatment will re-
store him if persistently adhered to.
If a man finds' his load too heavy
and feels 'that it will strain him to
proceed, kickoff a fence -board hurl
knock his down and then hammer
him thoroughly. This will give him
renewed energy and he will make
no fuss. But do not, on any ac-
count, ,reduce his loan.
If a man refuses to drink when
you give him water, de not give hint
any water for two. days. That will
"teach him" to be thirsty at any
time you find it convenient to at-
tend to blur.
It iv a good plan to ply the whip
frequently on a man who is at work.
No natter if he ie doing his best, hit
him now and teen on. "general
principles; 'and prevent him frim
taking any comport. If his load is
not heavy, oblige him to go much
faster to make up for it,
Tie your man's, bead: back in an
unnatural position with hien eyes' to-
ward the sun, This will give him a
fine appearance and prevent stumb-
ling. In winter remove his olothing
to "prevent his taking cold." He
will also dry quicker when, yon
overwork him. Men thus treated
are much healthier than when al.
lowed winter clothing,
lae
.1011.
Canadian Winter Eggs Please British Housewives
� fA
Anew branch of Canadian com-
merce has been established
in the shipping of winter -Produced
eggs to Great Britain, a move
officially inaugurated January 13
when the Canadian Pacifio
freighter Beaverbrao sailed from
Satut .lolin with the first earlot
shipment. A week before the
sistership i3cavorford carried, a
sample shipment overseas, the
first Canadian winter-producod
eggs ever sent to Great Britain,
11p till then only "etorago eggs"
3E:C..`A Wb.\
had been shipped, England re-
ceiving her fresh eggs from Con-
tinental countries. Canadian gov-
ernment officials stated this pro-
gressive step would boost the
Canadian product abovo the stan-
dard
taredard of Australian eggs and bring
them into competition with poul-
try eupplies from Danmark, draw -
tog butter prices for Canadian
farmers.
Photos above show: Depart-
ment of Agriculture "light -box"
test for Treatment after which
l
each egg is individually stamped
"Canada"; unloading eggs from
Canadian Pacific Express delivery
truck; the Beaverford sailing
from Saint John with the first
shipment and the smiling British
hotisewife who won distinction as
being the first user of the Can-
adian fresh eggs "putting the
finger on" her package of "firsts".
She said: "They're deliolous;
much better than the foreign Im-
ported eggs. With Canadian bacon
they form a wonderful mealf"